Ok, but are there any methods to desensitize reactivity? What would a doctor suggest?I protected my ears from moderate noises (e.g., vacuum cleaner, blender, etc.). I also made sure to watch movies at medium volume (to ensure that I don't end up with hyperacusis). Eventually my tinnitus stopped being as reactive.
You need to give it time. In 3-6 months, there is a good chance that your tinnitus will be less reactive.
The only thing that comes to mind is listening to TV at ever increasing volume. Here, you have a way to measure volume, and you can also measure the time that you spend watching TV at different volumes. You can try to gradually increase both... That ought to train your ears to be exposed to noise.Ok, but are there any methods to desensitize reactivity? What would a doctor suggest?
A doctor would likely suggest TRT and using sound therapy. It seems that for now, reactive tinnitus is treated similar to hyperacusis.Ok, but are there any methods to desensitize reactivity? What would a doctor suggest?
TV was awful for me early on and still can be. There is just something about the fake quality of the sound that bothers my ears. I have also noticed my tinnitus is louder if I watch TV, maybe because I strain to understand what the characters are saying. TV shows and movies often have music mixed with dialogue, that can be difficult for someone with hearing loss or reactive tinnitus.The only thing that comes to mind is listening to TV at ever increasing volume. Here, you have a way to measure volume, and you can also measure the time that you spend watching TV at different volumes. You can try to gradually increase both... That ought to train your ears to be exposed to noise.
Do you still have reactive tinnitus? If so, did it stay same, get better or worse over time?A doctor would likely suggest TRT and using sound therapy. It seems that for now, reactive tinnitus is treated similar to hyperacusis.
TV was awful for me early on and still can be. There is just something about the fake quality of the sound that bothers my ears. I have also noticed my tinnitus is louder if I watch TV, maybe because I strain to understand what the characters are saying. TV shows and movies often have music mixed with dialogue, that can be difficult for someone with hearing loss or reactive tinnitus.
Is there any real scientific evidence that reactive tinnitus gets better over 3-6 months from onset, or is this something people with good intentions like to repeat in order to be comforting? Is there really a timeline for tinnitus improvement of any sort?I protected my ears from moderate noises (e.g., vacuum cleaner, blender, etc.). I also made sure to watch movies at medium volume (to ensure that I don't end up with hyperacusis). Eventually my tinnitus stopped being as reactive.
You need to give it time. In 3-6 months, there is a good chance that your tinnitus will be less reactive.
This is what I would like to know and what is timeline. Tinnitus community & some 'experts' claim you can improve reactive tinnitus by starting at low volumes when listening to devices you can control and slowly over time incrementally increase volume. I haven't seen the scientific data for that however, so not sure if it's just a theory being spread online. The other thing which the 'experts' claim is that you should not become phonophobic because that will only make matters worse.Ok, but are there any methods to desensitize reactivity? What would a doctor suggest?
There isn't whole lot of scientific data on this subject, and by that I mean tinnitus as a whole. If you want to go even deeper and consider things like hyperacusis, noxacusis, dysacusis, and reactivity, it gets even worse. This is yet another big challenge when it comes to dealing with this symptom.I haven't seen the scientific data for that however, so not sure if it's just a theory being spread online.
To see some studies regarding the outlook for tinnitus, see this thread.Is there any real scientific evidence that reactive tinnitus gets better over 3-6 months from onset, or is this something people with good intentions like to repeat in order to be comforting? Is there really a timeline for tinnitus improvement of any sort?
That's a damn good question, and one that I don't think medical sciences has a clue about. I have been to three audiologists and two ENT's, and none of them are able to even speculate why some tinnitus is "constant" and not-reactive, while other tinnitus responds in various ways to ambient sound. My tinnitus actually varies from reactive to non-reactive on a day to day basis, which is even more inexplicable. Yesterday, my tinnitus was in it's non-reactive mode and traffic noise did nothing to it. However, today it was reactive, and the sounds of driving on the highway just made the hissing/ringing just ramp up even louder.Do we, as a community, have any educated guesses as to what causes reactivity? How does incoming ambient sound translate to increase of the noise, or sudden silence (sometimes) translate to a drop in the noise? What is happening under the hood?
In audio engineering, this would be considered an envelope follower, with faster or slower attack and decay times. What part of our biology is behaving as the envelope follower here?
It's confusing that's for sure. What you're describing is what I see people referring to as a spike in their tinnitus. The duration of the spike varies in time & usually lasts as long as the exposure to the external noise causing it to spike or in some cases it can last for longer time even up to a couple days. My right ear is highly reactive to most sounds where the external noise which don't have to be loud at all creates swirly whistle type sound which lasts same length of time as the external noise causing it or I can get a spike lasting for hours longer than the external noise. Also the louder I make the volume on my TV the louder my right ear tinnitus gets where it competes with it making it impossible for me to mask my tinnitus with my right ear.That's a damn good question, and one that I don't think medical sciences has a clue about. I have been to three audiologists and two ENT's, and none of them are able to even speculate why some tinnitus is "constant" and not-reactive, while other tinnitus responds in various ways to ambient sound. My tinnitus actually varies from reactive to non-reactive on a day to day basis, which is even more inexplicable. Yesterday, my tinnitus was in it's non-reactive mode and traffic noise did nothing to it. However, today it was reactive, and the sounds of driving on the highway just made the hissing/ringing just ramp up even louder.
I would love to hear an intelligent hypothesis on reactive vs. non-reactive tinnitus from someone learned on this forum, because the so called experts I have paid to help me provide nothing.
That's the million dollar question. The auditory system becomes like a hamster wheel where a light wind can cause the wheel to move. The auditory system has become so weak & fragile due to extensive damage that external noises creates a perceptible different and/or louder tinnitus sound. The auditory system has lost its control function (like a broken tuning button or dimmer light switch) to properly interpret & respond normally to the external sound. Likely a neurological injured component to this.Do we, as a community, have any educated guesses as to what causes reactivity? How does incoming ambient sound translate to increase of the noise, or sudden silence (sometimes) translate to a drop in the noise? What is happening under the hood?
In audio engineering, this would be considered an envelope follower, with faster or slower attack and decay times. What part of our biology is behaving as the envelope follower here?
This comforts me to hear actually as the reactivity to sound is easily the most distressing thing at the moment. I feel like the tone I am hearing was an existing tone that I had for awhile but recently (two weeks ago) I used over the ear headphones and ever since it has been reactive which has really done a number on my stress levels. I have talked to quite a few people who say the reactiveness went away by protecting their ears and being patient, but they did say it took awhile. Thanks for your reply.My tinnitus was super reactive for the first few months and it was hell in places with certain high pitched noises like supermarkets, coffee shops etc - I'm almost coming up to 2 year mark now and it's really just 'regular' tinnitus now rather than reactive.
Did you see any improvement whatsoever during those 18 months? And just how reactive was/is the tinnitus? Which sounds trigger it?I have had reactive tinnitus for 18 months now and it's still there.
Wouldn't that be considered as sound distortions?my PC fans sound like ringing/tones are mixed into the actual noise
I guess its both - it sounds fucked up in the moment and then leaves lingering elevated tinnitus.Wouldn't that be considered as sound distortions?
I remember early in my onset, my PC fan would be interpreted as a pure tone by my ears, likewise the shower, that would cause a bunch of weird pure tones overlaying the base noise. That did pass, but now, such sounds causes spikes in volume which can hang on for hours.
How is your tinnitus now? Have you experienced any improvement?I have had reactive tinnitus for 18 months now and it's still there. I am trying to expose my ears more to sound but had a major setback last week due to someone shouting. I think I need to protect my ears more by wearing earplugs.
Maybe change the name of the playlist from "damn Christmas songs" (⩺︷⩹) to "nice Christmas songs" (^ ω ^) and there won't be a problem(?)God, every song on the playlist (damn Christmas songs) causes my tinnitus to react loudly
You have had noise induced tinnitus for quite a while. The reason it is so oversensitive to sound is because your hyperacusis hasn't improved or has become worse over time. If you have been using any type of headphones even at low volume or being around loud sounds, it's a possible cause for the increase in your sensitivity to sound.God, every song on the playlist (damn Christmas songs) causes my tinnitus to react loudly now. Just a year ago it was only the sounds of cars, fans, and certain songs that caused it to react. Taking NAC, but not helping much I feel.