Thanks to @lapidus for bringing this to my attention but for some reason it didn't show in the alert box.
Who told you this vibration was of the stapedius?
Who wants to operate on you?
I've read a lot about this but I am still clueless and I don't know which is right and wrong. There have been positive and negative reports about tenotomies for middle ear myoclonus. In the chat-hyperacusis forum, healthboards forum and myoclonus proboards forum, positive were lib and JoeM and vasilia among others that you find once you read the threads they were in. But there have been negative experiences, and on chat-hyperacusis there is Trashboat and Astrid which are very worrying. And then there are some other partial failures or partial successes which are poorly explained. Maybe we can all read all of their experiences and maybe with a communal effort we can find differences in their profiles that led to each of their successes and failures.
The academic literature is usually very positive but of very poor quality because we need more quality, we need fuller descriptions from successful and unsuccessful patients to try to determine what sounds and effects come from what parts of the middle and inner ear. There was a recent poster presentation however at Baylor College of Medicine
that talks about 2 successes and 4 failures, but it doesn't specify further what the hell it's talking about, whether this were just inconsequential failures, serious failures, partial failures or just incomplete successes. I tried to contact Zhenh Huang in her email address but she's no longer a student there, maybe you live close to Jeffrey Vrabec, who appears to be the teacher in that project, and he knows more about these profiles and can tell us something.
What I'm trying to find out now is if a stapedius can cause a high pitched tinnitus that can't be heard from the outside, and I'm lining up a bunch of questions to phone lib about to see what she knows. I visited Aristides Sismanis a few months ago and either he was evasive about what he knew or I wasn't in form when I visited and failed to insist and ask him the required questions about whether his diagnosis of possible myoclonus of me is based on a stab in the dark or well fundamented experience.
I've also been reading about tinnitus in stapedectomy in otosclerosis and over there doctors seem more confident that low rumbling could be ''due to impairment of the mechanics of the cochlea and that creating an opening in the fixed foot plate alleviates this situation'' or that it could be ''due to conductive deafness due to
normally sub-audible tympanic and peri-tympanic vascular and muscular noises that are unmasked by the conductive deficit''. So it would seem its neither the stapedius nor the central cortex that does it but half way between the two because it says ''
According to Causse stapes fixation results in reduction of inner ear fluid vibration which is more
marked for low frequency sound than for high frequencies. This in turn means that fewer nerve
impulses reach the auditory cortex, particularly in those nerves concerned with low frequencies.
As a result of this the cortex stimulates the outer hairs via their afferent supply to a greater extent
than normal and this produces tinnitus.'' (
Effect of stapedectomy on subjective tinnitus
Marcin Szymanski and others 2003
And I'm also reading up on round window reinforcement where symptoms of ''myoclonus'' and ''hyperacusis'' seem to overlap and there's disagreement among neurotologists about the logic of the operation.
An ear surgeon in Norway is going to operate on me, he has good knowledge of this. I am waiting for the operation now, and hopefully it will be in August or September.