- Aug 26, 2018
- 6
- Tinnitus Since
- 1980
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Conductive hearing loss in r.ear, ? L.ear
I have had tinnitus (pulsatile and a constant high pitched ringing/hissing) for many years now, after losing the hearing in my right ear when I was around 11. I also suffered severe otalgia for many years, so severe I couldn't tolerate anything touching the ear canal and hyperacusis (loud noises feel like an electric shock going through my head).
However, a completely new kind of tinnitus started some months ago, a rhythmic or continuous deep buzzing, vibrating noise. At first I assumed it was some kind of wax build up touching ear drum, causing dulled hearing and some kind of irritation of the ear drum but when I went to have wax removed the audiologist said there wasn't any trace of wax at all (with no abnormal loss of hearing in that ear either). The sensation is as if a small wasp were buzzing in the ear canal i.e. not just a rumbling/buzzing sound but a palpable vibration. Over the same time frame I've been suffering some severe vertigo attacks (room spinning sensation). I think my eustachian tube is blocked, as when I hold my nose and blow, I can feel the build up of pressure in one ear, but not the one affected by the buzzing. This buzzing disappears if I talk, and becomes intermittent if I chew gum and the vibration is sometimes t so strong I think I can feel it in my little finger if I press it into the canal (when I perform exercises to try to open the eustachian tube). There isn't any clicking, only the sound of buzzing and sensation of the eardrum vibrating.
At the same time that this started, I've been suffering a worsening flare of oral sores that my dentist said might be lichen planus, which went away with a week of prednisone (50 mg tapered). Curiously, the buzzing disappeared whilst I was taking the prednisone but reappeared again the day I stopped. In addition to the very severe tinnitus in my deaf ear this additional sensation/tinnutis (which was made worse by the steroids) and dulled hearing quality in my good ear is really driving me to distraction.
I also have constant globus sensation on the same side that seems to 'connect' to the abnormal ear sensation, but when I try exercises to relax this it a) has no effect on the globus and b) actually makes the ear buzzing worse.
I saw ENT last week, largely to check out that the persistent sores on my palate and throat weren't potentially pre-malignant, but there wasn't anything to see by time of the appointment. They were dismissive of the new tinnitus even though I tried to explain it's very different in quality and volume from the kind that seems related to actual hearing loss.
My suspicion is that the buzzing is stapes's myoclonus, or spasming of the tiny eustachian tube muscles, perhaps related to whatever the inflammatory issue causing the oral stomatitis and the long-term blockage of the eustachian tube. I don't really want to try another pulse of prednisone because it's worsened the 'ordinary' tinnitus in my deaf ear to the extent I can't hear people talking because the hissing is so loud, diazepam may help damp it down a little. It's impossible to 'block' it with noise as you might do with other kinds of tinnitus because this doesn't affect the 'buzzing insect' sensation in the ear drum, which is what I find unbearable.
However, a completely new kind of tinnitus started some months ago, a rhythmic or continuous deep buzzing, vibrating noise. At first I assumed it was some kind of wax build up touching ear drum, causing dulled hearing and some kind of irritation of the ear drum but when I went to have wax removed the audiologist said there wasn't any trace of wax at all (with no abnormal loss of hearing in that ear either). The sensation is as if a small wasp were buzzing in the ear canal i.e. not just a rumbling/buzzing sound but a palpable vibration. Over the same time frame I've been suffering some severe vertigo attacks (room spinning sensation). I think my eustachian tube is blocked, as when I hold my nose and blow, I can feel the build up of pressure in one ear, but not the one affected by the buzzing. This buzzing disappears if I talk, and becomes intermittent if I chew gum and the vibration is sometimes t so strong I think I can feel it in my little finger if I press it into the canal (when I perform exercises to try to open the eustachian tube). There isn't any clicking, only the sound of buzzing and sensation of the eardrum vibrating.
At the same time that this started, I've been suffering a worsening flare of oral sores that my dentist said might be lichen planus, which went away with a week of prednisone (50 mg tapered). Curiously, the buzzing disappeared whilst I was taking the prednisone but reappeared again the day I stopped. In addition to the very severe tinnitus in my deaf ear this additional sensation/tinnutis (which was made worse by the steroids) and dulled hearing quality in my good ear is really driving me to distraction.
I also have constant globus sensation on the same side that seems to 'connect' to the abnormal ear sensation, but when I try exercises to relax this it a) has no effect on the globus and b) actually makes the ear buzzing worse.
I saw ENT last week, largely to check out that the persistent sores on my palate and throat weren't potentially pre-malignant, but there wasn't anything to see by time of the appointment. They were dismissive of the new tinnitus even though I tried to explain it's very different in quality and volume from the kind that seems related to actual hearing loss.
My suspicion is that the buzzing is stapes's myoclonus, or spasming of the tiny eustachian tube muscles, perhaps related to whatever the inflammatory issue causing the oral stomatitis and the long-term blockage of the eustachian tube. I don't really want to try another pulse of prednisone because it's worsened the 'ordinary' tinnitus in my deaf ear to the extent I can't hear people talking because the hissing is so loud, diazepam may help damp it down a little. It's impossible to 'block' it with noise as you might do with other kinds of tinnitus because this doesn't affect the 'buzzing insect' sensation in the ear drum, which is what I find unbearable.