Musical Tinnitus, Deep Pressure and Ear Pain Following Sinusitis

BeMagnified

Member
Author
Dec 2, 2022
27
Canada
Tinnitus Since
04/2007 (regular T), 11/22 (musical T)
Cause of Tinnitus
Unknown
I am a thirty-something year old female who suddenly developed tinnitus in my right ear at the age of 18. Initially my tinnitus sounded like a low grade siren. Eventually the siren sound went away and was replaced with a hum along with hissing and whistling. After the initial shock, I was able to cope with these sounds for the most part.

I have had chronic sinusitis for almost three years. When my sinus symptoms become worse, my right ear will eventually become clogged and my hearing will become distorted. The humming will also increase in volume and intensity.

About a few weeks ago, my sinusitis became worse and one day, I woke up unable to hear bass tones with my right ear. Over the following week, my hearing improved but then I started to hear tinnitus like sounds in a pattern of a melody.

It has been two weeks and I now hear this "music" during all my waking hours.

I am having a lot of difficulty coping with this musical tinnitus. I can't concentrate and feel nauseated much of the time. I haven't been able to sleep a full night in a few weeks.

On top of the musical tinnitus, I have deep pressure and sometimes pain in my right ear and have sensitivity to noise.

I went to my PCP and all she could see was the fluid that has been sitting behind my eardrums for nearly three years.

I have used masking for years but now the masking seems to bring out the musical tinnitus even more.

I am in deep psychological pain and have considered calling a crisis line. I am already under psychiatric care and have a routine follow up appointment coming up later this month. I tried to move this appointment to sooner but it can't be done.

If this turns out to be permanent, then I don't know how I'm going to adapt and cope with this new musical tinnitus.
 
To continue my story..

My musical tinnitus has gotten louder and more pronounced. I hear it 24/7 and it's really wearing on my nerves.

My nurse practitioner called me today to follow up on my appointment with her from a couple of weeks ago. She asked me if I was still experiencing symptoms and I told her that I am. So she asked that I book a hearing test and to get my yearly baseline blood test done. So I got my blood test done (during my last prolonged tinnitus spike, I had a blood test show that I had high neutrophil levels. I wonder if today's blood test will show the same).

I booked a hearing test and they got me in right away. The audiologist took pictures of both ears. He also did a pressure test. My right eardrum didn't move the first time but it did move the next two times that he ran the test (so if I do have fluid behind my eardrums, it's not enough to make a difference).

My pure tone test showed normal hearing in both ears. The hearing in my right ear (the one with the tinnitus) is slightly better than my left ear. My speech threshold test came out as normal in both ears.

So now I see my nurse practitioner in person next week. And I'm not hopeful that this appointment will lead to any relief as she told me that she didn't know what to do the last time I saw her for the same symptoms.

I have a routine follow up appointment with my psychiatrist and I plan on explaining this situation to him. During my last prolonged tinnitus spike, he gave me a PRN and suggested that I try hearing aids.

I still struggle to sleep and I still feel nauseated much of the time. This whole situation is making me feel crazy, especially with my hearing and ear tests coming out as normal.
 
It seems I have developed the same thing. I've never had this sound before and I was trying to describe it and the word symphony came to mind. I also felt nauseous but thankfully, that seems to have settled.

I too am wondering how am I going to get used to this. I'm sorry @BeMagnified that I can't offer you any other advice than what I'm telling myself. Be patient. It's all I've got and that I know how you feel.
 
I wouldn't describe mine as a symphony. As most of it sounds like a single instrument (sometimes accordion like and sometimes bagpipes like) playing the same two to five notes over and over again (I have a handful of different "tunes" that I hear). When I don't hear these "tunes", I hear what sounds like a vacuum or a race track or screeching tires in my head. This is on top of the hissing, whistling and humming I've had for many years. I'm finding it depressing and mentally exhausting to deal with.
 
Out of all my new noises, I'm finding the vacuum like sound the most disturbing (the musical patterns are easier to deal with than the vacuum or the screeching tires).

When I went to bed on Friday, my right ear was screaming. I normally take 50 mg of Quetiapine 4 hours before I go to bed, which I did that night. I ended up taking 50 mg more when I went to bed due to my ear. Unfortunately, it still took me 5 hours to fall asleep. For the first hour and a half, I tried different sounds on one of my sound machines but the vacuum sound pierced through them all. I then took a break from trying to sleep and watched TV for an hour and a half. Then I went back to bed and tossed and turned for another 2 hours. I woke up after three and a half hours of sleep. I then proceeded to have multiple anxiety attacks throughout the day.

I have a routine follow-up appointment coming up with my psychiatrist this week and I don't know how that will go. During my last prolonged tinnitus spike, he gave me enough Quetiapine that I could take up to 100 mg per day (25 mg up to 4 times per day as needed). I started to take Quetiapine 12 years ago and it seemed much more effective then than it is now. At the same time, I'm afraid to go off of it because I went through withdrawal the last time that I did.

Since developing tinnitus nearly 16 years ago, multiple doctors have recommended SSRI antidepressants to me. Due to having problems with both sleep and tinnitus, I have mostly avoided SSRIs. I did try a couple SSRIs a few years ago only to end up with dizziness and sleep maintenance insomnia with both of them. I didn't notice a change with my tinnitus but I wasn't on either of them for long (I feared that they would worsen my tinnitus). I am definitely not open to trying another SSRI antidepressant right now and I know my psychiatrist knows this. Because of this, I'm afraid that he can do nothing to help me.
 
So I saw my psychiatrist this afternoon. I told him that I have felt very overwhelmed due to the musical tinnitus over this past month. He asked if I had seen an ENT. I told him that I saw my PCP and all she could see was fluid behind both eardrums (this has been a chronic problem all my life). I also told him that I saw an audiologist and that he found nothing wrong. He asked if I could hear the music in my ear or in my head. It is honestly both depending on the sound but the musical patterns tend to be more in my head (it's all on my right side regardless). He said it sounds like I'm having musical hallucinations. He asked how I would feel about switching to Risperidone. I told him that I'm afraid that I would go through withdrawal if I went off Quetiapine. So he said that I could take both. Now he wants me to take 0.5 mg of Risperidone along with 50 mg of Quetiapine.

I don't know if Risperidone will help but I'm willing to try it (it's not an SSRI antidepressant and so I'm not as afraid of it). Even if it just improves my sleep, it will help me cope better. The vacuum sound came back last night and so I took another 25 mg of Quetiapine. It took me an hour to fall asleep, which is not ideal but at least it didn't take me 5 hours like last week. I have a follow-up appointment with my psychiatrist shortly after the New Year.

I see my PCP later on this week. I think she still won't know what to do since my blood test and audiogram came back as normal.

I have had inflammation of both eardrums off and on since seeing her last month. I've taken pictures of this inflammation and I might show them to her when I see her (I've had ear pain off and on for the past month but she didn't see any inflammation when I saw her last).
 
all she could see was fluid behind both eardrums
@BeMagnified -- It seems to me that if you could successfully address the fluid behind your eardrums, you might solve your problem. Since the doctors you've seen have not been able to find a way to do that, you might want to consider looking for a doctor who can. My best guess is a reputable Naturopathic Doctor would likely be able to help you. You could also try some self-help methods to clear up your sinusitis. I've posted many links to various videos on how that can be accomplished. -- All the Best...
 
I saw my PCP today and my appointment pretty much went as expected. She brought up how my blood work and hearing test were both normal. I showed her pictures of the inflammation of my eardrum that comes and goes (my eardrum wasn't inflamed today when she looked). She doesn't believe I could be having reoccuring ear infections despite pain and visible inflammation unless I have had a fever, which I haven't.

I brought up how I'm still having problems with hearing distortion, sound sensitivity, pain, ear pressure, dizziness and musical tinnitus. She said that in my medical records it says that I have had tinnitus since 2007. I told her that I didn't develop the musical type until suddenly just over a month ago after my chronic sinusitis symptoms flared up.

I brought up how I have had fluid sitting behind both eardrums for 3 years. I also brought how I haven't been able to breathe through my left nostril in 3 years and how I have chronic sinus pressure on the left side of my face and how I have tried everything possible to manage this (different steroid nasal sprays, saline washes, antihistamines, decongestants...).

She offered to refer me back to the local ENT. I told her that the local ENT has brushed off both my sinus problems and ear problems multiple times in the past. She is not willing to help me aside from prescribing more nasal spray, which isn't adequately working.

So my PCP offered to refer me to an ENT out of town, which I agreed to. My PCP told me it will probably take a month just to get an appointment set up due to the holidays coming up. Then who knows how long it will be before I actually see this ENT (the audiologist said that I might have a 2 to 3 year wait due to my hearing testing normal).
 
I saw my PCP today and my appointment pretty much went as expected. She brought up how my blood work and hearing test were both normal. I showed her pictures of the inflammation of my eardrum that comes and goes (my eardrum wasn't inflamed today when she looked). She doesn't believe I could be having reoccuring ear infections despite pain and visible inflammation unless I have had a fever, which I haven't.

I brought up how I'm still having problems with hearing distortion, sound sensitivity, pain, ear pressure, dizziness and musical tinnitus. She said that in my medical records it says that I have had tinnitus since 2007. I told her that I didn't develop the musical type until suddenly just over a month ago after my chronic sinusitis symptoms flared up.

I brought up how I have had fluid sitting behind both eardrums for 3 years. I also brought how I haven't been able to breathe through my left nostril in 3 years and how I have chronic sinus pressure on the left side of my face and how I have tried everything possible to manage this (different steroid nasal sprays, saline washes, antihistamines, decongestants...).

She offered to refer me back to the local ENT. I told her that the local ENT has brushed off both my sinus problems and ear problems multiple times in the past. She is not willing to help me aside from prescribing more nasal spray, which isn't adequately working.

So my PCP offered to refer me to an ENT out of town, which I agreed to. My PCP told me it will probably take a month just to get an appointment set up due to the holidays coming up. Then who knows how long it will be before I actually see this ENT (the audiologist said that I might have a 2 to 3 year wait due to my hearing testing normal).
Hey there @BeMagnified,

First of all, I commend you for keeping it together enough while these not helpful at all "professional" fools do nothing. I am glad to hear you are going to another ENT, hoping they can get you in asap. I would demand MRI of sinuses and ears. if you have fluid still behind the eardrum somewhere or if you have significant sinus blockages, these could be addressed and greatly help your situation. Has anyone even tried a steroid with you? It sounds like no intervention has been given to try to address the inflammation.
 
First of all, I commend you for keeping it together enough while these not helpful at all "professional" fools do nothing. I am glad to hear you are going to another ENT, hoping they can get you in asap. I would demand MRI of sinuses and ears. if you have fluid still behind the eardrum somewhere or if you have significant sinus blockages, these could be addressed and greatly help your situation. Has anyone even tried a steroid with you? It sounds like no intervention has been given to try to address the inflammation.
I managed to get a 10-day course of Prednisone from an ER doctor but that was over 2 years ago. Almost all doctors (including 2 ENTs) that I have encountered have done nothing but prescribe steroid nasal spray while offering no other help. I did have an MRI of the auditory canal over 2 years ago and that showed nothing. Over a year ago, my last PCP sent me to an allergist for a skin prick test and I reacted to nothing that I was tested for. So the allergist sent me for a CT scan of my sinuses. This scan showed the inflammation of my sinuses but the cause of this inflammation is still unknown. The allergist prescribed me more steroid nasal spray and referred me back to my PCP.
 
I wouldn't describe mine as a symphony. As most of it sounds like a single instrument (sometimes accordion like and sometimes bagpipes like) playing the same two to five notes over and over again (I have a handful of different "tunes" that I hear).
I am having the exact same thing and only recently described it as either bagpipes or accordion, and the same few notes, along with other noises.

It does seem different to a lot of other tinnitus I've read about. My tinnitus is 100% noise related but I also have had sinus problems in the past, and sinusitis which I had two surgeries for 12 and 10 years ago.

I also have fluid buildup. It isn't behind the eardrums, as this would have been spotted by the 2xENTs, 2xAudiologists and 2xGPs that have looked in to my ear recently - I don't know where yet, but if my head or face is massaged I feel fluid running down he back of my throat, plus I can get a bit dizzy.

Unfortunately I can't offer any explanation as I'm equally as curious as this seems different to most people's tinnitus, but you aren't alone.
 
I am having the exact same thing and only recently described it as either bagpipes or accordion, and the same few notes, along with other noises.

It does seem different to a lot of other tinnitus I've read about. My tinnitus is 100% noise related but I also have had sinus problems in the past, and sinusitis which I had two surgeries for 12 and 10 years ago.

I also have fluid buildup. It isn't behind the eardrums, as this would have been spotted by the 2xENTs, 2xAudiologists and 2xGPs that have looked in to my ear recently - I don't know where yet, but if my head or face is massaged I feel fluid running down he back of my throat, plus I can get a bit dizzy.

Unfortunately I can't offer any explanation as I'm equally as curious as this seems different to most people's tinnitus, but you aren't alone.
It's very different than the still ongoing tinnitus that seems to come directly from my right ear (simple whistling and hissing with no patterns). Sometimes the musical tinnitus seems to be in my ear but also sometimes it seems to be in my head although still on the right side. Also the noise from the shower will drown out the simple hissing and whistling but it makes the musical tinnitus louder or more prominent.

Besides the musical tinnitus, I do hear other sounds, too. In a way, I feel like I have a radio in the right side of my head that changes frequencies every few minutes. Sometimes I'll hear simple music and other times I'll hear what sounds like a race track or a vacuum.

I have fluid behind both eardrums that has been sitting there for nearly 3 years. I have post nasal drip that comes and goes. I have also experienced some dizziness since the onset of my musical tinnitus.
 
It's very different than the still ongoing tinnitus that seems to come directly from my right ear (simple whistling and hissing with no patterns). Sometimes the musical tinnitus seems to be in my ear but also sometimes it seems to be in my head although still on the right side. Also the noise from the shower will drown out the simple hissing and whistling but it makes the musical tinnitus louder or more prominent.

Besides the musical tinnitus, I do hear other sounds, too. In a way, I feel like I have a radio in the right side of my head that changes frequencies every few minutes. Sometimes I'll hear simple music and other times I'll hear what sounds like a race track or a vacuum.

I have fluid behind both eardrums that has been sitting there for nearly 3 years. I have post nasal drip that comes and goes. I have also experienced some dizziness since the onset of my musical tinnitus.
Mine too, the musical tone is the only one that really feels in the head, the others are more in the ear.

I have also felt that one of the other tones is like a radio. It almost feels like repetitive speech in a way but nothing I can make out.

I wonder if the fluid is the reason these tones are not tonal, and have a pattern to them - as fluid in the system I can't believe will be still for very long.

I do get frustrated that the only medical papers I can find on the subject veer towards musical hallucinations, which this clearly is not.

I wonder if the fluid is also the reason for the shared dizziness at times.

If only someone could piece together all these sub-types for patterns, some of this may start making sense!
 
I am a thirty-something year old female who suddenly developed tinnitus in my right ear at the age of 18. Initially my tinnitus sounded like a low grade siren. Eventually the siren sound went away and was replaced with a hum along with hissing and whistling. After the initial shock, I was able to cope with these sounds for the most part.

I have had chronic sinusitis for almost three years. When my sinus symptoms become worse, my right ear will eventually become clogged and my hearing will become distorted. The humming will also increase in volume and intensity.

About a few weeks ago, my sinusitis became worse and one day, I woke up unable to hear bass tones with my right ear. Over the following week, my hearing improved but then I started to hear tinnitus like sounds in a pattern of a melody.

It has been two weeks and I now hear this "music" during all my waking hours.

I am having a lot of difficulty coping with this musical tinnitus. I can't concentrate and feel nauseated much of the time. I haven't been able to sleep a full night in a few weeks.

On top of the musical tinnitus, I have deep pressure and sometimes pain in my right ear and have sensitivity to noise.

I went to my PCP and all she could see was the fluid that has been sitting behind my eardrums for nearly three years.

I have used masking for years but now the masking seems to bring out the musical tinnitus even more.

I am in deep psychological pain and have considered calling a crisis line. I am already under psychiatric care and have a routine follow up appointment coming up later this month. I tried to move this appointment to sooner but it can't be done.

If this turns out to be permanent, then I don't know how I'm going to adapt and cope with this new musical tinnitus.
For the serious chronic sinus problems, you may want to check out this MD and his recommended procedures on YouTube. There should be more information on this procedure as I read about this many years ago. But check with your doctor before you want to try this. Take care. God bless.

Dr. Jon Kaiser: Flushing Your Sinuses with Hydrogen Peroxide
 
@BeMagnified - when you mention 'deep pressure' in your ears, does it feel as if a muscle is contracting or tightening in your ear when you hear certain noises? Any burning sensation?
 
@BeMagnified - when you mention 'deep pressure' in your ears, does it feel as if a muscle is contracting or tightening in your ear when you hear certain noises? Any burning sensation?
I wouldn't say that I experience any contracting or tightening in my right ear when I hear certain noises. The pressure in my ear varies throughout the day but it doesn't seem connected to anything. I have experienced a burning sensation but that doesn't seem to be connected to anything either.
Mine too, the musical tone is the only one that really feels in the head, the others are more in the ear.

I have also felt that one of the other tones is like a radio. It almost feels like repetitive speech in a way but nothing I can make out.

I wonder if the fluid is the reason these tones are not tonal, and have a pattern to them - as fluid in the system I can't believe will be still for very long.

I do get frustrated that the only medical papers I can find on the subject veer towards musical hallucinations, which this clearly is not.

I wonder if the fluid is also the reason for the shared dizziness at times.

If only someone could piece together all these sub-types for patterns, some of this may start making sense!
I really don't get the impression that I'm experiencing musical hallucinations in the way it's been researched. It feels more like my tinnitus is constantly changing tones or sounds. I don't hear clear voices or instruments but I definitely hear patterns.
 
It's been 3 weeks since I started to take 0.5 mg of Risperidone. I am now generally calmer compared to a month ago and my sleep is better. I experience much less nausea now compared to how I was in November.

A few weeks ago, I was hearing three distinct melody/patterns along with other sounds that would rotate through. In the last week, I've heard the same one melody that comes and goes (the other two disappeared). Along with the hissing and the whistling, I now have constant roaring and screeching in my right ear. I still have fullness, pain and hearing distortion on that ear. I still have fluid behind both ear drums but that's been a problem for years.

My mood is quite low. It's been a long time since I've felt this depressed. I'm not sure what can be done about this.

Up until a month ago, I used to listen to music every day. Now I can't stand listening to music since I feel so lopsided (my hearing is similar on both sides according to my last hearing test but it doesn't feel that way). I'm okay with listening to people talk, though.
 
I had a follow up with my psychiatrist. I told him that the complex melodies are gone but that I still hear patterns. He suggested that I could start taking 0.5 mg of Risperidone twice per day instead once per day to see if that would make the patterns go away. We also talked about my sleep. I told him that it's gotten better but it's still not 100% (it's on the restless side). So he gave me sleeping pill samples. I found myself unable to communicate to him about my depressed mood although I hope to when I see him again for the next follow up appointment (I tend to freeze up at appointments).

I just experienced another turn of events today. This morning, I came down with a fever, chills, nasal congestion, post nasal drip and a rapid resting heart beat. So I did a rapid COVID-19 test and it came back positive, which I'm not surprised since I've been surrounded by sick people since just after Christmas.

I have read many horror stories about people losing their hearing or getting tinnitus after having COVID-19. So I am experiencing anxiety about what this could mean for my ears. I fear making the tinnitus in my right ear worse or also developing tinnitus in my left ear.

My hearing does seem a bit muffled in both ears but I'm also having a lot of post nasal drip.

This is my first time knowingly catching something in over three years.
 
I thought I would do an update after nearly two months.

In January, I was sick with COVID-19 for a couple of weeks. My hearing became muffled in both ears but my baseline tinnitus stayed the same (I just experienced fleeting tinnitus here and there with both ears). My hearing eventually returned to normal. More than anything, it took a long time for my sense of taste and smell to return to normal.

My ears were pretty stable for the first half of February. I was and still am experiencing musical tinnitus 24/7 but I have gotten used to it to a degree (also the medication that I take usually helps me sleep and I cope better when I get enough sleep).

Things took a turn for the worse in the second half of February. The symptoms of my chronic sinusitis started flaring up again. After a few days of intense sinus pressure, I woke up unable to hear low tones in my right ear along with intense pressure now within both ears. I could also hear loud humming and rumbling in my right ear. My ears eventually settled down but the sinus pressure continued on.

Over the past week, I developed sinus pain on the left side of my face. So I saw my PCP and she prescribed me oral antibiotics. She also informed me that I'm on a wait list to see an ENT (she sent the referral nearly three months ago but no one had gotten back to me).

I'm on day 2 of taking the antibiotics. The pain is gone but the pressure is still very intense on the left side of my face and I feel like I can't breathe on that side. My left ear actually feels normal and my hearing on the side seems normal.

After going away for a while, the deep pressure in my right ear has returned. In the last couple of days, I've also developed a new tone that sounds like a cowbell in that ear. This cowbell sound has made it difficult for me to sleep and to concentrate.

I have had sinus problems since 2018 but they didn't seem to start impacting my ears until the spring of 2020. I feel like my sinus problems and my tinnitus have gotten worse over time but I can't seem to get any long term relief for either.
 
This is to add 'a beginning' to my tinnitus story.

It was 16 years ago this week that my tinnitus began suddenly. One week before my onset, I had gotten sick. After a day, I felt better overall but then I started to experience sound distortion, dizziness and fullness in my right ear. I saw my PCP and she told me that my ears looked clear.

Then one Sunday morning at about 3 AM, I was tossing and turning in bed unable to sleep. The back of my head was also hurting and I was sensitive to sound. I turned off my fan and discovered that my right ear was humming with two different low pitched tones (it sounded like a low grade siren). My first instinct was to mask the humming but the sound of the fan was painful to me.

I took Ibuprofen and my headache went away after an hour. I turned my fan back on and the noise from that masked the humming. I finally got to sleep at around 4:30 AM and managed to sleep for a few hours.

The humming, sound distortion, dizziness and fullness in my right ear continued on and so I went back to my PCP. She said that I was showing the classic signs of Meniere's disease. She didn't offer to refer me to an ENT. Instead, I had to get my referral from an ER doctor.

Six months later, I got to see my first ENT. He sent me for a hearing test and a blood test, which both came back normal. He couldn't see any problems with my ears (this has been the case multiple times over the last 16 years. All the different tests that I have had have all come back normal).

I don't know when it happened but the two humming tones disappeared and were replaced by a stable whistling sound and a hissing sound that would vary in intensity. I generally found the whistling and the hissing sounds more tolerable than the two low pitched humming tones. I was able to habituate to the hissing and whistling. They more or less became background noise (Unfortunately, I can't say my newly developed musical tinnitus has become background noise even after 5 months. My musical tinnitus masks everyday sounds and seems to interfere with my hearing. I hear it over everything, unlike the hissing and whistling, which I still have).
 
I thought I would do an update since it's been 6 months since I've developed musical tinnitus. I would say that my musical tinnitus is about the same as it was when it suddenly came on 6 months. I still hear bagpipes/accordion like sounds playing the same 3 to 5 note melodies that I've grown very familiar with. I can still hear it in the shower and in traffic passing by. Ambient noise does not mask it at all, unlike my regular tinnitus. It seems to bring out the musical sounds more. I have discovered that music is pretty good at masking it. I usually don't hear the musical patterns when I play actual music.

I saw an ENT back in March. He told me that everyone has fluid in their middle ears and that he didn't feel that mine was causing any problems. He looked at my MRI from 2020 and my hearing test results from last December and saw that they were both normal. So he couldn't come up with a diagnosis. He looked at my CT scan of my sinuses from 2021 and said that the inflammation wasn't severe enough to do anything beyond prescribing steroid nasal spray. He recommended that I ignore the tinnitus, look into CBT and see a psychiatrist (I didn't tell him that I already see a psychiatrist).

Up until recently, I had been seeing my psychiatrist once every two to three weeks. Back in December, he prescribed me Risperidone starting at 0.5 mg once per day. At one point, I was taking 0.75 mg twice per day. At that dose, the side effects were too intense and they were doing nothing to reduce the musical patterns. So I started to wean down the dose. I now take 0.125 of Risperidone as well as 25 mg of Quetiapine once per day. I hope to be completely off the Risperidone by mid summer.

I think I'm now over the initial shock of developing musical tinnitus. I can eat without feeling nauseated and I'm generally able to sleep fine. Anxiety isn't usually a problem in my day to day life like it was as recently as a couple months ago. I also don't feel depressed like I did.

More than anything these days, the musical tinnitus causes annoyance (rather than anxiety). It still also makes it difficult to concentrate. I also now get listener fatigue from constantly hearing something 24.7.
 
Congratulations on your improvement in overall handling of the musical tinnitus.

Time is something the body needs to help us accept the new normal. My first year with tinnitus was a nightmare. But over time, the brain hardened to the tinnitus and things improve from that point on. Keep up the positive spirit and gradually you will find the tinnitus either decrease in intensity or it is slowly ignored by the brain.

Take good care. God bless your recovery.
 

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