Has anyone experienced or heard of this?
My tinnitus started ten years ago in my left ear after a sinus infection that was mostly in my left sinuses. I went to an audiologist who found nothing wrong with my hearing. I saw the graphs. They were flat: good hearing at the various frequencies.
Nine years later (a year ago) I noticed I had a lot of hearing loss at at high frequencies in my left ear. I discovered this in a humorous way. (See below for that.) A few months ago, I went to the audiologist who found exactly that: Not much change in the right ear (slight decrease at high frequencies) but a large decrease in the left ear at high frequencies.
I discussed the latest audiologist results with an ENT. He said, no, it's not possible for tinnitus to cause hearing loss. He would not entertain the possibility. I pointed to my two charts from his own audiologist over ten years. He still denied tinnitus-to-hearing loss causation. But I'm afraid he was the type of doctor who is the incurious, by-the-book type. I suppose it is possible that he's right if it is merely by coincidence that I've lost hearing in my tinnitus ear. But I doubt this.
Anyone have any insight on this?
[The funny story: There were crickets outside my window one night. I noticed that when I was still they carried on, but that when I turned my head, one of them with a high pitch would stop! I tried this over and over again. Sure enough, the cricket was apparently watching me and getting spooked by my movements and going quiet! Could crickets do that?! Would it help them avoid predators? I supposed it was possible. Then I realized I couldn't hear that particular cricket in my left ear because I'd lost my upper-register hearing in that ear and that turning my head had revealed this.]
My tinnitus started ten years ago in my left ear after a sinus infection that was mostly in my left sinuses. I went to an audiologist who found nothing wrong with my hearing. I saw the graphs. They were flat: good hearing at the various frequencies.
Nine years later (a year ago) I noticed I had a lot of hearing loss at at high frequencies in my left ear. I discovered this in a humorous way. (See below for that.) A few months ago, I went to the audiologist who found exactly that: Not much change in the right ear (slight decrease at high frequencies) but a large decrease in the left ear at high frequencies.
I discussed the latest audiologist results with an ENT. He said, no, it's not possible for tinnitus to cause hearing loss. He would not entertain the possibility. I pointed to my two charts from his own audiologist over ten years. He still denied tinnitus-to-hearing loss causation. But I'm afraid he was the type of doctor who is the incurious, by-the-book type. I suppose it is possible that he's right if it is merely by coincidence that I've lost hearing in my tinnitus ear. But I doubt this.
Anyone have any insight on this?
[The funny story: There were crickets outside my window one night. I noticed that when I was still they carried on, but that when I turned my head, one of them with a high pitch would stop! I tried this over and over again. Sure enough, the cricket was apparently watching me and getting spooked by my movements and going quiet! Could crickets do that?! Would it help them avoid predators? I supposed it was possible. Then I realized I couldn't hear that particular cricket in my left ear because I'd lost my upper-register hearing in that ear and that turning my head had revealed this.]