I've been using this website as a valuable resource for the last few weeks, and now that it looks like I'm to be a lifetime member of the club I figured I'll join. Maybe I'll learn something valuable; maybe someone can learn from my experience.
So to back up, 9 weeks ago I woke up with greatly reduced low-frequency hearing in my right ear. But this has happened before (allergies etc.) so I wasn't concerned. After a few days with no improvement I started on decongestants, then antihistamines, then nasal spray. After 2 weeks of that I went to my family doctor, who got me in to an ENT guy 2 weeks after that. He did an audiogram which showed about 30 dB loss at 250 Hz and maybe 10 dB loss at 500 Hz, and fine above that. He did a Weber test (512 Hz tuning fork on the forehead). He saw no ear wax, no fluid in the middle ear. So he concluded it's Eustachian tube dysfunction and will resolve in a few weeks. Wrong-o. (I'll explain why later).
I expressed my skepticism so he booked me to see another ENT, would have been for mid-November. But after another couple of weeks of no improvement, along with a lot of reading at this site and others I was pretty sure I needed to be competently examined, FAST. So I got on the cancellation waiting list for the new ENT, and got in to see him 3 days ago. You can probably guess where this is going... he said it's SSNHL, probably due to nerve damage, maybe as a result of a virus, and the likelihood of substantial improvement was minimal. He started me on a one-week course of prednisone anyway. No improvement so far, but we'll see in a few more days I guess.
In the mean time my family doctor also sent me for a CT scan a week ago. I got an iodine injection for contrast. No idea if this is related but that night the tinnitus started for real. A loud low-frequency roar. I couldn't sleep at all. Since then it's varied a lot but is always there. Major bummer as I'm a musician and audio engineer, and all music now sounds awful. I'm not quite ready to throw in the towel - we'll see how the next few weeks go.
So here's some "if I knew then what I know now":
- if you think you've got SSNHL (there's easy ways to check even at home) get to a specialist FAST
- if there's a long wait to see the specialist get on the cancellation waiting list
- (here's where the 1st ENT went wrong) if you get a Weber test, make sure it's at a frequency at which you have substantial hearing loss, or the sound will not lateralize and you'll think it's just conductive hearing loss. My ENT used a 512 Hz tuning fork but I didn't have enough hearing loss there to make the sound completely lateralize to the left. I later tried it myself with a 320 Hz tuning fork and immediately realized it was sensorineural.
So... I don't know how this will turn out but I'll let you all know one way or the other. Fingers crossed.
So to back up, 9 weeks ago I woke up with greatly reduced low-frequency hearing in my right ear. But this has happened before (allergies etc.) so I wasn't concerned. After a few days with no improvement I started on decongestants, then antihistamines, then nasal spray. After 2 weeks of that I went to my family doctor, who got me in to an ENT guy 2 weeks after that. He did an audiogram which showed about 30 dB loss at 250 Hz and maybe 10 dB loss at 500 Hz, and fine above that. He did a Weber test (512 Hz tuning fork on the forehead). He saw no ear wax, no fluid in the middle ear. So he concluded it's Eustachian tube dysfunction and will resolve in a few weeks. Wrong-o. (I'll explain why later).
I expressed my skepticism so he booked me to see another ENT, would have been for mid-November. But after another couple of weeks of no improvement, along with a lot of reading at this site and others I was pretty sure I needed to be competently examined, FAST. So I got on the cancellation waiting list for the new ENT, and got in to see him 3 days ago. You can probably guess where this is going... he said it's SSNHL, probably due to nerve damage, maybe as a result of a virus, and the likelihood of substantial improvement was minimal. He started me on a one-week course of prednisone anyway. No improvement so far, but we'll see in a few more days I guess.
In the mean time my family doctor also sent me for a CT scan a week ago. I got an iodine injection for contrast. No idea if this is related but that night the tinnitus started for real. A loud low-frequency roar. I couldn't sleep at all. Since then it's varied a lot but is always there. Major bummer as I'm a musician and audio engineer, and all music now sounds awful. I'm not quite ready to throw in the towel - we'll see how the next few weeks go.
So here's some "if I knew then what I know now":
- if you think you've got SSNHL (there's easy ways to check even at home) get to a specialist FAST
- if there's a long wait to see the specialist get on the cancellation waiting list
- (here's where the 1st ENT went wrong) if you get a Weber test, make sure it's at a frequency at which you have substantial hearing loss, or the sound will not lateralize and you'll think it's just conductive hearing loss. My ENT used a 512 Hz tuning fork but I didn't have enough hearing loss there to make the sound completely lateralize to the left. I later tried it myself with a 320 Hz tuning fork and immediately realized it was sensorineural.
So... I don't know how this will turn out but I'll let you all know one way or the other. Fingers crossed.