It has been one year since I was diagnosed with incipient otosclerosis. I don't have hearing loss, but my tinnitus is very disturbing. Anyone here dealing with the same thing?
Otosclerosis is a condition that mainly affects the stapes, one of the tiny bony ossicles in the middle ear. To have normal hearing, the ossicles need to be able to move freely in response to sound waves. What happens in otosclerosis is that abnormal bone material grows around the stapes. The foot of the stapes, where it attaches to the cochlea, is usually where the condition starts. The abnormal bone reduces the movement of the stapes, which reduces the amount of sound that is transferred to the cochlea. The growth of the abnormal bone is very gradual. However, eventually the stapes can become fixed, or fused, with the bone of the cochlea which can cause severe hearing loss. The hearing loss is known as conductive hearing loss (the sound vibrations cannot be conducted, or transmitted, from the stapes to the cochlea).
Yes, you're not alone. Bad tinnitus here too. I did surgery, it did not get rid of tinnitus (but it did change its characteristics). I have a hearing aid, it doesn't do much.I'm wondering if anyone else out there is dealing with tinnitus due to otosclerosis. My hearing loss seems to be increasing and the tinnitus getting louder. Hard to concentrate in my quiet office and am looking into hearing aids and surgery. Just looking for others going through this same annoying and life altering journey .
Greg, what happens to the cochlear with this? Can changes actually be seen or are they inferred from other test results?I have cochlear otosclerosis too:
Greg, what happens to the cochlear with this? Can changes actually be seen or are they inferred from other test results?
Hi, I would recommend you a middle ear high-resolution computed tomography before any middle ear surgery is done. I was diagnosed otosclerosis 25 years ago, I had visited a myriad of ENT's and they all confirmed that I had otosclerosis. Well, a few months back I had a high-resolution CT and it showed that my middle ear was absolutely perfect. No calcification of middle ear bonds at all, so a surgery would have only made things worst. Don't give for granted you have otosclerosis despite the conventional tests done by your ENT, go for a high resolution scan to confirm the diagnose, then take your decision. I'm now so glad that I refused a stapedectomy that I didn't need, knowing the nasty side effects it has when things go wrong. Good luck!Hi there, this is a long shot as your post is from years ago, but how did your surgery go in the end?
Hi, I would recommend you a middle ear high-resolution computed tomography before any middle ear surgery is done. I was diagnosed otosclerosis 25 years ago, I had visited a myriad of ENT's and they all confirmed that I had otosclerosis. Well, a few months back I had a high-resolution CT and it showed that my middle ear was absolutely perfect. No calcification of middle ear bonds at all, so a surgery would have only made things worst. Don't give for granted you have otosclerosis despite the conventional tests done by your ENT, go for a high resolution scan to confirm the diagnose, then take your decision. I'm now so glad that I refused a stapedectomy that I didn't need, knowing the nasty side effects it has when things go wrong. Good luck!
A high-resolution CT is anaesthesia and antibiotics free, and non invasive at all. Do you mean you would let a doctor open up your ears when a CT can do the job safely and simply in a few minutes?You make a good point about doing a high resolution CT before surgery, but the surgeon isn't going to proceed with a stapedotomy/stapedectomy if there are no signs of otosclerosis when he opens up your ear, so you aren't going to risk the "nasty side effects" as you mention.
The beginning of a stapedotomy is much like exploratory surgery after the ear drum is lifted. If there are no signs of otosclerosis (it is visible to the surgeon), the surgeon will seal the ear drum back and abort the stapedotomy. He won't swap your perfect stapes bone for a prosthesis just "for the fun of it".
I went through all kind of tests dozens of times, including the diapason, like yours, and the diagnosis was always OTOSCLEROSIS, which I didn't have as the high-resolution CT has proved. So, take the shortest way and get a high-resolution CT, then you will know for sure if the problem is your middle ear. In my opinion, this will give you an accurate diagnosis and will save you time and money.Do you know the thing that vibrates and the doctor puts on the back of the ear and the in front of ear?
I could hear the same in both in my left ear... Could this be the cause?
My right ear it was much louder by the ear than in the back.
Tympanogram says 0.28 left ear snd 0.5 right ear...
The normal is above 0.3, should I be concerned?
How were you diagnosed?
No, that's not what I meant. I was reacting to:A high-resolution CT is anaesthesia and antibiotics free, and non invasive at all. Do you mean you would let a doctor open up your ears when a CT can do the job safely and simply in a few minutes?
The stapedotomy would have been aborted when the surgeon would have realized that you didn't have signs of otosclerosis, so the surgery wouldn't have made things worse.No calcification of middle ear bonds at all, so a surgery would have only made things worst.
It's not that obvious. Like I mentioned in a prior post: I did a high res CT and half a dozen doctors failed to diagnose otosclerosis from it.So, take the shortest way and get a high-resolution CT, then you will know for sure if the problem is your middle ear.
GregCA, Yes, I agree on that, but I assume that the CT will be taken the right way and that the doctor/s will interpret it correctly, which is not always the case, I know. Thanks for your valuable opinion, Greg.It's not that obvious. Like I mentioned in a prior post: I did a high res CT and half a dozen doctors failed to diagnose otosclerosis from it.
It's still a great tool, and like you, I'd always recommend to do it before undergoing any type of surgery (even exploratory).
Just don't get fooled into thinking it's bullet-proof: absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence.
GregCA, Yes, I agree on that, but I assume that the CT will be taken the right way and that the doctor/s will interpret it correctly, which is not always the case, I know.
Hello.@aura, did it turn out to be otosclerosis? Given your recent posts, I guess that maybe it's not otosclerosis.
You mention an abnormal ART result. In what sense was it abnormal?
Thanks, that's really strange. Could someone explain you why this may be happening?Hello.
It wasn't otosclerosis after all.
I have no idea what caused this.
I have absent acoustic reflex. Well sometimes it is absent, sometimes present. Very strange.
Just curious; what does it mean to have an "absent" acoustic reflex? That the stapedius or tensor tympani muscles doesn't contract and protect properly?I also have absent acoustic reflex on the worst side
Have you run enough tests to rule out otosclerosis?I also have absent acoustic reflex on the worst side which gives me low hum from time to time. I did not check it again when the low him was not present, because I suspect that ART may have contributed to developing UHF tinnitus as well.
No. I planned to get a HRCT, then postponed due to COVID-19. I went to quite some ENTs and they told me that it might be otosclerosis, but my hearing loss is too little to benefit from a surgery. Also, I think my low hum can be atypical MEM or middle ear related. I don't think that otosclerosis causes intermittent humming.Have you run enough tests to rule out otosclerosis?
I guess so, but in a MEM group where people as a last result get tenotomy to cut their middle ear muscles I was told that it's not that clear that the stapedius reflex is there to protect from loud noises, but literature says that its main purpose is protection.Just curious; what does it mean to have an "absent" acoustic reflex? That the stapedius or tensor tympani muscles doesn't contract and protect properly?
I guess so. The strange thing is they found my AR to be present from time to time. In 80% of the medical clinics i've been to they couldn't find my AR.Just curious; what does it mean to have an "absent" acoustic reflex? That the stapedius or tensor tympani muscles doesn't contract and protect properly?
It was "designed" for protection indeed, but from what I've read it doesn't help much. It's not something that you can count on when exposing to loud sounds.I guess so, but in a MEM group where people as a last result get tenotomy to cut their middle ear muscles I was told that it's not that clear that the stapedius reflex is there to protect from loud noises, but literature says that its main purpose is protection.
Otosclerosis is a middle ear disease (mainly - there's a "cochlear" variant too).No. I planned to get a HRCT, then postponed due to COVID-19. I went to quite some ENTs and they told me that it might be otosclerosis, but my hearing loss is too little to benefit from a surgery. Also, I think my low hum can be atypical MEM or middle ear related.
I experienced intermittent humming.I don't think that otosclerosis causes intermittent humming.
Yes, you are absolutely right, I know that and worded it wrongly. I don't rule it out, but I don't really understand how a fixed stapes would cause low vibrating humming every year for a 2-3 week period (while it is still on/off, one day it's there, the next it's absent.). This has been going on since 2016 (2018 no low sound, 2020 6-month-period of low hum, 2021 up until now no humming.) But I absolutely don't know and none of the ENTs could provide even an educated guess.Otosclerosis is a middle ear disease (mainly - there's a "cochlear" variant too).
In terms of coming and going, yes.Yes, you are absolutely right, I know that and worded it wrongly. I don't rule it out, but I don't really understand how a fixed stapes would cause low vibrating humming every year for a 2-3 week period (while it is still on/off, one day it's there, the next it's absent.). This has been going on since 2016 (2018 no low sound, 2020 6-month-period of low hum, 2021 up until now no humming.) But I absolutely don't know and none of the ENTs could provide even an educated guess.
Was yours behaving similarly?