Hi fellow T companions. Let me start my first post on this forum with speaking out my gratitude towards all of the people who maintain and support Tinnitus talk. This forum has been a great support for me in coping with this hell-like condition the past year. My T started with a simple ear infection in April 2014. Different doctors just send me home with the diagnoses bilateral T without measurable hearing loss and the advice to learn to cope with it. Since then this high squealing sound never left. The first months were a hell I went through and even don't wish happen to an enemy, but eventually, like many of you can comprehend, you learn to cope with it.
Even though I learned to cope with it, questions like what causes this condition and why is there still no remedy for this T-torture still crosses my mind. Blessed with an academic brain (but missed my calling by not becoming a scientist) I started to research the underlying mechanisms of the human hearing combining it with basic physics of sound.
My simple theory about the cause of T is that neurons that regulate/measure the amplitude of incoming sound signals in the brain (not the cochlea) are dysregulated after a traumatic event (sound, infection or baro trauma). You can compare it with a faulty sound amplifier that amplifies the random electronic noise that normally must stay below the thresholds of the sound-to-noise ratio, but manifest itself as a phantom sound because of over stimulation. The fact that many T-sufferers hear a pure tone (a clear frequency) in combination with a hissing sound (random amplitude signals on all frequencies) was also an indication for me to come up with this theory.
With this thought I began to experiment with listening to different sounds to find any abnormalities in my hearing capability (since my hearing test at the hospital had resulted in perfect hearing, max 10db loss). In an attempt to test my hearing on different frequencies I downloaded a signal generator app to my smartphone which can generate pure tone sound on different frequencies. Playing around (gradually increasing and decreasing the frequency on a normal volume) I noticed that the pure tone sound switched from my left to right ear on two frequency ranges (from 4800 Hz to 5300 Hz and 8800 Hz to 9300 Hz). It is a sensation that I can describe as a sound moving from left to right through the middle of my head without a 'silent' gap. Besides this also the sound seemed to be higher in volume in this two ranges (notice that I do not have H).
So my question to all of you, who like me don't have measurable hearing loss and are able and willing to try out the little experiment above, is:
Do you also experience abnormalities in listening gradually to an increasing pure tone sound at a normal sound volume level (we don't want to cause more T ?
Unfortunately I don't have much time to post as often to this forum as I would like to do because of a busy work schedule, but from time to time I will come back to share some thoughts with you guys and gals…
Wish you all silent days in the near future,
Mic
Even though I learned to cope with it, questions like what causes this condition and why is there still no remedy for this T-torture still crosses my mind. Blessed with an academic brain (but missed my calling by not becoming a scientist) I started to research the underlying mechanisms of the human hearing combining it with basic physics of sound.
My simple theory about the cause of T is that neurons that regulate/measure the amplitude of incoming sound signals in the brain (not the cochlea) are dysregulated after a traumatic event (sound, infection or baro trauma). You can compare it with a faulty sound amplifier that amplifies the random electronic noise that normally must stay below the thresholds of the sound-to-noise ratio, but manifest itself as a phantom sound because of over stimulation. The fact that many T-sufferers hear a pure tone (a clear frequency) in combination with a hissing sound (random amplitude signals on all frequencies) was also an indication for me to come up with this theory.
With this thought I began to experiment with listening to different sounds to find any abnormalities in my hearing capability (since my hearing test at the hospital had resulted in perfect hearing, max 10db loss). In an attempt to test my hearing on different frequencies I downloaded a signal generator app to my smartphone which can generate pure tone sound on different frequencies. Playing around (gradually increasing and decreasing the frequency on a normal volume) I noticed that the pure tone sound switched from my left to right ear on two frequency ranges (from 4800 Hz to 5300 Hz and 8800 Hz to 9300 Hz). It is a sensation that I can describe as a sound moving from left to right through the middle of my head without a 'silent' gap. Besides this also the sound seemed to be higher in volume in this two ranges (notice that I do not have H).
So my question to all of you, who like me don't have measurable hearing loss and are able and willing to try out the little experiment above, is:
Do you also experience abnormalities in listening gradually to an increasing pure tone sound at a normal sound volume level (we don't want to cause more T ?
Unfortunately I don't have much time to post as often to this forum as I would like to do because of a busy work schedule, but from time to time I will come back to share some thoughts with you guys and gals…
Wish you all silent days in the near future,
Mic