This may sound bizarre, but from what I gather, most tinnitus is caused by shock to the auditory system.
For example, this is why people with gradual hearing loss don't have tinnitus that much despite losing hearing, compared to people who have shot guns, attended concerts etc and have tinnitus with mild hearing loss - because the system was put in shock.
I've noticed people on here that protect their hearing a lot seem to suffer from a lot of spikes too. Could this be that our brain has a sort of tinnitus shock threshold? Like if a noise is over a certain decibel then it will cause a spike as a result of this shock?
I've spoken to a few people who rarely protect, and with fairly loud noises they don't get any spike at all, could this be that exposing themselves to normal sound has raised their threshold so the brain doesn't get shocked by these sounds?
I don't know if this is stupid or no, and I don't wan to insult anyone. But I noticed it was the same with me. When I first got T and i protected, my tinnitus would change a lot. Now I only protect in loud situations say over 85db for a long exposure, and I only get temporary spikes if anything which go away after a sleep. It's more anxiety related for me though I think.
Perhaps some people's is just more reactive then others which is why there is the need to protect, but I'm tired so I'm probably just making stuff up in my head. Any thoughts?
For example, this is why people with gradual hearing loss don't have tinnitus that much despite losing hearing, compared to people who have shot guns, attended concerts etc and have tinnitus with mild hearing loss - because the system was put in shock.
I've noticed people on here that protect their hearing a lot seem to suffer from a lot of spikes too. Could this be that our brain has a sort of tinnitus shock threshold? Like if a noise is over a certain decibel then it will cause a spike as a result of this shock?
I've spoken to a few people who rarely protect, and with fairly loud noises they don't get any spike at all, could this be that exposing themselves to normal sound has raised their threshold so the brain doesn't get shocked by these sounds?
I don't know if this is stupid or no, and I don't wan to insult anyone. But I noticed it was the same with me. When I first got T and i protected, my tinnitus would change a lot. Now I only protect in loud situations say over 85db for a long exposure, and I only get temporary spikes if anything which go away after a sleep. It's more anxiety related for me though I think.
Perhaps some people's is just more reactive then others which is why there is the need to protect, but I'm tired so I'm probably just making stuff up in my head. Any thoughts?