Nitrous Oxide / Laughing Gas. Safe with Tinnitus?

orbiter12

Member
Author
Mar 22, 2017
257
Tinnitus Since
18/03/17
Cause of Tinnitus
Loud club
Is it safe to take nitrous oxide / laughing gas with tinnitus?

Used to do it before tinnitus on occasions just very fun but can give audio hallucinations and make you feel light headed and dizzy.

Apart from the balloon bursting (I'll wear muffs), will actually taking it affect my tinnitus?

Just here to find out if anyone was had experience with it and if it will make my already severe tinnitus worse.

The plan was to go for a few drinks then have a few balloons of it after for the good feels.
 
nobody here is going to advocate that you do whippets dude. myself included. lol

From a purely scientific perspective - it's unlikely they'll do much harm in regards to your tinnitus. That said - nitrous is known to deplete B12 levels, which is bad for the myelin sheath of your nerves. Low b12 is associated with tinnitus, potentially for this reason.

It takes many months of abusing nitrous before this happens, so like with all drugs, if you're reasonable you'll likely be fine. YMMV.
 
Weren't you just panicking about a room of people clapping? And didn't you recently ask if you should get prednisone because a balloon popped near you while you were wearing foam earplugs? Are you still taking prednisone?

And now you're considering doing something with balloons and something that could cause auditory hallucinations? :cautious:

Sorry, but you're making me slip into parent mode.
 
Weren't you just panicking about a room of people clapping? And didn't you recently ask if you should get prednisone because a balloon popped near you while you were wearing foam earplugs? Are you still taking prednisone?

And now you're considering doing something with balloons and something that could cause auditory hallucinations? :cautious:

Sorry, but you're making me slip into parent mode.
still on prednisolone

and yes, considering it with muffs and earplugs but will most likely avoid.

just wanted to see if anyone has any experience with it.
 
still on prednisolone

and yes, considering it with muffs and earplugs but will most likely avoid.

just wanted to see if anyone has any experience with it.
I wouldn't mix steroids with nitrous oxide. I was even told not to have alcohol while taking steroids.

If you felt clapping was such a severe acoustic trauma that you needed steroids, maybe give the steroids a chance to work before doing anything that might cause auditory hallucinations.

But if you do and your tinnitus gets worse, don't come crying to us . . . Naw, I'm just kidding, actually do if you need support because that's what we're here for. Honestly, I don't think it would cause a permanent spike.

Warned you that I was in parent mode. ;)
 
I wouldn't mix steroids with nitrous oxide. I was even told not to have alcohol while taking steroids.

If you felt clapping was such a severe acoustic trauma that you needed steroids, maybe give the steroids a chance to work before doing anything that might cause auditory hallucinations.

But if you do and your tinnitus gets worse, don't come crying to us . . . Naw, I'm just kidding, actually do if you need support because that's what we're here for. Honestly, I don't think it would cause a permanent spike.

Warned you that I was in parent mode. ;)
just went for a few drinks nothing more. plugs fully inserted!
 
I have no idea but god damn whippets were fun back in the day. Horrible for your nervous system but still fun af on occasion.

If you do end up doing them, try to keep it to a minimum and have some B12 (specifically in the form of methylcobalamin lozenges - the other stuff they try to sell in supplements won't get absorbed) on hand since that's the biggest thing nitrous oxide messes with.

If you're just recovering from acoustic trauma or a spike and you're using prednisone to recover, definitely don't do it in the next month at least. I don't know what event others are referring to in the thread but always give your ears every opportunity to recover before experimenting with other stuff. I'm all for having a good time but don't rush yourself or give into peer pressure either.
 
ClinicalTrials.gov Nitrous Oxide treatment for Tinnitus ClinicalTrials.gov
gov Identifier NCT03365011
Last update posted Dec 14 2018

But I can't seem to find and look at the results ?
perhaps someone a little more computer savvy could help ?
 
If anyone can find more positive info we could perhaps shift this to Alternative treatments and Research forum?
 
I wouldn't never mess with nitrous oxide ever. Noticed my tinnitus one night after messing around with this stuff. I mean I didn't even do them that often, barely did them compared to what others do. My tinnitus was caused from heaps of things though. But I am a tiny tiny bit deaf in my right ear yet I hear it in my left a lot.
 
I wouldn't never mess with nitrous oxide ever. Noticed my tinnitus one night after messing around with this stuff. I mean I didn't even do them that often, barely did them compared to what others do. My tinnitus was caused from heaps of things though. But I am a tiny tiny bit deaf in my right ear yet I hear it in my left a lot.

Is there any difference from what dentist use? Did your T go back to baseline after?
 
Bill since I have to get my wisdom tooth removed, none of those links work. Were they discussing issues with laughing gas dentists use with tinnitus increases?
The first two links haven't been archived by archive.org. The third link got archived, but it is probably not relevant, as it is about the experience of some junkie.
https://web.archive.org/web/20191018022620/https://erowid.org/experiences/exp.php?ID=49717

You might want to browse through
https://scholar.google.ca/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0,5&q=+"nitrous+oxide"+tinnitus&btnG=

I see that there had been two studies investigating this gas as a treatment for tinnitus. See whether you can find any case studies where someone got tinnitus as a result of having such a procedure.
 

Log in or register to get the full forum benefits!

Register

Register on Tinnitus Talk for free!

Register Now