Hi, first post here. Looks like quite a nice community. I found this place after some google searching.
Has anyone noticed a spike in their tinnitus before or during barometric pressure changes?
I'll explain why I ask: I'm in Wisconsin, where like a lot of the country we are experiencing the type of cold weather we haven't seen in over twenty years...I've noticed my tinnitus seems to spike akin to the sore in the bones people sometimes get with storms coming while these fronts roll through.
has anyone else experienced this?
I'm glad I found this place. I've had T since 1995, still remember vividly sitting my high school classes wondering how on earth I was going to cope with it...thankfully, I have had some years where it's not too bad.
It recently flared up, I had a sinus infection, I was beyond stressed about grad school applications, and then the plane ride to a family reunion a week before x-mas really set it flaring. Let's just say x-mas for me was a lot of wondering how on earth I was going to cope with it.
I'm not sure what the plane ride home did but for a few days afterward I was dizzy and almost felt sea sick (I don't get motion sickness normally), and T was overpowering. It was unbearable. To clarify this was from WI to AZ so not an international flight or anything, 3 hrs flight.
Now of course, I'm hesitant to travel by plane. I'm hoping that it was from being sick, as I've traveled a lot and never had that problem before.
I'm totally rambling, but I did read somebody's post here saying they felt a similar feeling after flying (from Spain I think?)
edit: also one other question. does anyone's T sound change tune briefly like for a moment a knob was turned, then it slowly goes back? Mine does every once and a while and it makes it wonder if it can change like that could it be possible to "turn it off"? If my mind is inventing the T sound, is it also inventing this change?
thank you, I look forward to the comments.
Has anyone noticed a spike in their tinnitus before or during barometric pressure changes?
I'll explain why I ask: I'm in Wisconsin, where like a lot of the country we are experiencing the type of cold weather we haven't seen in over twenty years...I've noticed my tinnitus seems to spike akin to the sore in the bones people sometimes get with storms coming while these fronts roll through.
has anyone else experienced this?
I'm glad I found this place. I've had T since 1995, still remember vividly sitting my high school classes wondering how on earth I was going to cope with it...thankfully, I have had some years where it's not too bad.
It recently flared up, I had a sinus infection, I was beyond stressed about grad school applications, and then the plane ride to a family reunion a week before x-mas really set it flaring. Let's just say x-mas for me was a lot of wondering how on earth I was going to cope with it.
I'm not sure what the plane ride home did but for a few days afterward I was dizzy and almost felt sea sick (I don't get motion sickness normally), and T was overpowering. It was unbearable. To clarify this was from WI to AZ so not an international flight or anything, 3 hrs flight.
Now of course, I'm hesitant to travel by plane. I'm hoping that it was from being sick, as I've traveled a lot and never had that problem before.
I'm totally rambling, but I did read somebody's post here saying they felt a similar feeling after flying (from Spain I think?)
edit: also one other question. does anyone's T sound change tune briefly like for a moment a knob was turned, then it slowly goes back? Mine does every once and a while and it makes it wonder if it can change like that could it be possible to "turn it off"? If my mind is inventing the T sound, is it also inventing this change?
thank you, I look forward to the comments.