tiniturtle
Member
You need to have proper imaging and evaluation by a doctor that is trained to diagnose and treat this. This is not an ENT. My pulsatile tinnitus went away on its own, and that's what also marked the point at which my dural arteriovenous fistula became life threatening. That was the symptom that my neurosurgeon found most concerning. It's generally really bad when it stops. I didn't hear it anymore, because the vein fully shut down and the blood flow was being forced backwards back into the veins of my brain. No one here can diagnose you or give you answers, just help point you in the right direction. I've given you sound advice about how to go about doing that.Hi All,
I've got a few questions that I'd like to ask please.
1) Can pulsatile tinnitus go away on its own? I'm concerned that the cause of mine isn't going to be detected as I've read that this is the case For around 30 per cent of people. I've also read that it rarely goes away on its own. It hasn't filled me with much confidence when I keep being told by doctors to learn to live with it as I'd rather they were trying to find a cause still.
I was just wondering if anyone out there had it but it did eventually go on its own.
2) If pulsatile tinnitus and tinnitus are two different things, why do some of us randomly have both out of the blue around the same time roughly? I got mine both six weeks apart.
3) My symptoms are changing quite a lot and I'm developing more and more symptoms. I now have a lot of what I believe to be eye floaters as well as ever changing tinnitus. Do any of you know why this could be?
I'm having some blood taken soon but I don't think it will determine much.
Thank you. Hope you're all keeping well and staying stay during this COVID-19 situation.
Regards.