Dear Dr. Nagler,
my name ist Catherine. I am from Germany an a tinnitus sufferer.
I have a very special kind of tinnitus – it is the pulsating one.
It started April this year after a whiplash injury and and since then it has driven me up the wall.
This loud hissing sound began on the right side. After a month it changed to the center of my head, later to he left. (I know, it sounds strange –but I cannot explain it otherwise.)
Of course I had all exames you can imagine: MRA/MRI, CT, Doppler and so on. All came back clear.
In this hopeless state I went to hospital, spezialized on TRT. After spending 7 weeks there nothing had changed. So I started to read each and every paper on tinnitus I could download. Finally – after having read the statements and works by Robert Aaron Levine and Tanit Ganz Sanchez I am convinced that my tinnitus results from a hearing loss (I have hearing aids now) and from somatic causes. In the upright-MRT they could see a atlanto-axial instability. And I have also learned that this kind of tinnitus will stay.
One night, when I was exremely desperated I found your "letter to a tinnitus sufferer". Thank you for having written this! It ist not exaggerated, but that night it saved my life! Thank you again.
I understood that you were suffering from a tonal loud sound. And you could cope after some time. My question now: Can you imagine or have you learned that also pulsatile tinnitus sufferers were able to habituate that terrible noise, or even overheard it? I have never met anyone with a pulsatile tinnitus who really managed it.
It is a basic question I have, because my "going on" depends on it. I need some hope.
So far I have tried lots of different medicaments. Xanax, gingko, magnesium and some more. And I see the physiotherapist on regular terms.
But nothing has helped up to now. So I fear I must accept this terrible condition, Do you see a chance that i could make it? To accept it an live with it one day?
Sorry for my poor English. I would be very happy if you could send me a short answer.
I wish you a wonderful quiet day,
Catherine
my name ist Catherine. I am from Germany an a tinnitus sufferer.
I have a very special kind of tinnitus – it is the pulsating one.
It started April this year after a whiplash injury and and since then it has driven me up the wall.
This loud hissing sound began on the right side. After a month it changed to the center of my head, later to he left. (I know, it sounds strange –but I cannot explain it otherwise.)
Of course I had all exames you can imagine: MRA/MRI, CT, Doppler and so on. All came back clear.
In this hopeless state I went to hospital, spezialized on TRT. After spending 7 weeks there nothing had changed. So I started to read each and every paper on tinnitus I could download. Finally – after having read the statements and works by Robert Aaron Levine and Tanit Ganz Sanchez I am convinced that my tinnitus results from a hearing loss (I have hearing aids now) and from somatic causes. In the upright-MRT they could see a atlanto-axial instability. And I have also learned that this kind of tinnitus will stay.
One night, when I was exremely desperated I found your "letter to a tinnitus sufferer". Thank you for having written this! It ist not exaggerated, but that night it saved my life! Thank you again.
I understood that you were suffering from a tonal loud sound. And you could cope after some time. My question now: Can you imagine or have you learned that also pulsatile tinnitus sufferers were able to habituate that terrible noise, or even overheard it? I have never met anyone with a pulsatile tinnitus who really managed it.
It is a basic question I have, because my "going on" depends on it. I need some hope.
So far I have tried lots of different medicaments. Xanax, gingko, magnesium and some more. And I see the physiotherapist on regular terms.
But nothing has helped up to now. So I fear I must accept this terrible condition, Do you see a chance that i could make it? To accept it an live with it one day?
Sorry for my poor English. I would be very happy if you could send me a short answer.
I wish you a wonderful quiet day,
Catherine