- Feb 17, 2017
- 10,400
- Tinnitus Since
- February, 2017
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Acoustic Trauma
When you hear a hiss, could you please put on your Peltor muffs and see whether it still sounds like a hiss? Mine often sounds like a high-pitch tone when I do that. Is a hiss just a quieter version of the high-pitch tone?!
What is the treatment? I have them as well, and like them because of the protection, but thats about it.I got today 3M Peltor X5A earmuffs and I'm very impressed.
I think everyone should buy them, they do a very good job and I think is the best
treatment for tinnitus and hyperacusis without side effects.
I had generic earmuffs but X5As are the best.
This is the treatment...What is the treatment? I have them as well, and like them because of the protection, but thats about it.
That's quite literally what gave me hyperacusis, but if it's helping you..This is the treatment...
Overprotection of hearing for extended time reduces tinnitus and hyperacusis.
This is the treatment...
Overprotection of hearing for extended time reduces tinnitus and hyperacusis.
What You would call overprotection HAD cured my Hyperacusis (and had improved my T).Overprotection worsens hyperacusis....
What You would call overprotection HAD cured my Hyperacusis (and had improved my T).
This is the treatment...
Overprotection of hearing for extended time reduces tinnitus and hyperacusis.
If one were to wear muffs or earplugs 24/7, then perhaps the above would happen. If one were to wear hearing protection when outside one's home, visiting place that might be loud (so we are not talking about quiet parks, or quiet offices), and protect from, say, a couple of hours (my case) up to something like 8 hours a day, and then watch TV at the loudest volume one can comfortably watch it for a couple of hours, then (based on my experience) what you described above Won't happen. What Will likely happen is that you will give your ears a break, and in my experience (and in the experiences of many others here) this tends to promote healing.Overprotection increases auditory gain, which in turn results in sounds being perceived as louder than they actually are.
Yes but the effect only lasts a short momentOverprotection increases auditory gain, which in turn results in sounds being perceived as louder than they actually are. It's silly to even suggest that this would be an acceptable remedy for hyperacusis.
You are wrong. The opposite happens.Overprotection increases auditory gain, which in turn results in sounds being perceived as louder than they actually are. It's silly to even suggest that this would be an acceptable remedy for hyperacusis.
Hyperacusis from overprotecting is mostly reversible, that's true.Yes but the effect only lasts a short moment
It's never causing a permanent increase in H.
Millions sleep with earplugs and no one woke up with permanent, irreversible hyperacusis
Yes but the effect only lasts a short moment
It's never causing a permanent increase in H.
Millions sleep with earplugs and no one woke up with permanent, irreversible hyperacusis
If one were to wear muffs or earplugs 24/7, then perhaps the above would happen. If one were to wear hearing protection when outside one's home, visiting place that might be loud (so we are not talking about quiet parks, or quiet offices), and protect from, say, a couple of hours (my case) up to something like 8 hours a day, and then watch TV at the loudest volume one can comfortably watch it for a couple of hours, then (based on my experience) what you described above Won't happen. What Will likely happen is that you will give your ears a break, and in my experience (and in the experiences of many others here) this tends to promote healing.
You are wrong. The opposite happens.
The problem with the statement above is that the Medical Community is Also not basing their recommendations on scientific studies (as those studies just don't exist):The medical community disagrees with you... I'd love to hear you back that up with scientific proof.
http://hyperacusisfocus.org/research/earplug-use-2/
"While there are over 2200 posts on hyperacusis setbacks in the patient forum on chat-hyperacusis.net, no academic papers could be found using a pubmed search."
The fact that there have been no published studies regarding what causes permanent and temporary T spikes, means there is no scientific reason behind doctor advice to only protect your ears against noises that are known to damage the inner ear. They are basing this advice on studies that talk about what can damage healthy ears, whereas what can hurt us hasn't been studied (and the overwhelming number of testimonies on this site imply that sounds that can hurt us are Way quieter than the sounds that can damage healthy ears).
When your ears are no longer subjected to shocks, they can begin the slow process of recovery. I agree one ought to subject oneself to noises that Won't be too loud. You can't control the volume of a noisy street, but you can control the volume of your TV or computer. So you can watch TV at the loudest volume that doesn't cause any problems for you, and not worry about H.How would increasing your auditory gain reduce hyperacusis? That makes ZERO sense.
The problem with the statement above is that the Medical Community is Also not basing their recommendations on scientific studies (as those studies just don't exist):
When your ears are no longer subjected to shocks, they can begin the slow process of recovery. I agree one ought to subject oneself to noises that Won't be too loud. You can't control the volume of a noisy street, but you can control the volume of your TV or computer. So you can watch TV at the loudest volume that doesn't cause any problems for you, and not worry about H.
I agree.although you'd never truly know because there's nothing to compare it with.
Acoustic traumas/loud noises can cause H in the first place. An acoustic trauma had certainly caused mine. Once you have T and/or H, it is not difficult (as in the volume that would do it is lower than the volume that would do it for a person with healthy ears) to get a T and/or H spike. These spikes would certainly not promote your recovery.But what I am saying is that overprotecting will absolutely not make hyperacusis better. Your watching of television at a moderate volume improved your H, not your use of hearing protection.
I agree.
Acoustic traumas/loud noises can cause H in the first place. An acoustic trauma had certainly caused mine. Once you have T and/or H, it is not difficult (as in the volume that would do it is lower than the volume that would do it for a person with healthy ears) to get a T and/or H spike. These spikes would certainly not promote your recovery.
So why not get the best of all worlds - minimize the chance of a spike while also trying to keep increasing the volume on that TV?
Though between boundries. There is a maximum level for television broadcasts.Sure you can control the volume, but almost any show or movie will have scenes that get much louder without any warning.
I set the volume on my computer to 60% of the maximum volume. I also turned the speakers away from me, so that they face the wall. It seems to have worked.I do doubt the same excists on facebook-video's though for instance.
I set the volume on my computer to 60% of the maximum volume. I also turned the speakers away from me, so that they face the wall. It seems to have worked.