Good morning!
I first noticed pulsatile tinnitus in October 2018 and did not think anything of it at that time. Please note that this was a significantly stressful time in my personal life (I am unsure as to whether or not stress is related at this time). In the coming weeks, it became louder, possible due to my increased awareness of it. At this time, I felt a crackle when I swallowed in my right ear, pulse, and constant whoosing.
My medical history: 25 yo, Allergies to animals (I do not have any) and dust mites (4/4 on an allergy test scale).
Early January 2019: While investigating tinnitus, I was attempting to clean my ears with a q-tip. I noticed that I could not get in all the way; my external auditory canal was partially blocked. I felt a lump. Touching it with my finger and q-tip caused it to pop with blood tinged drainage. Following popping this cyst, the pulsating force went down, albeit still present, the whooshing decreased in audibility, and there is no longer a crackle when I swallow. Despite popping this abscess, there is still a small bumb on the bottom of my auditory canal.
Following treatment with antibiotics, my GP stated that my ear drum looked normal and that the lump appeared to decrease in size, just a small white bumb. My GP referred me to an ENT.
February 2019: The ENT referred my to audiology. My hearing is not impacted and the results came back normal. The only abnormality they identified was that I have eustachian tube dysfunction in both ears, with much greater severity in the right ear. I was started on mometasone (Nasonex) to reduce inflammation with to avail following 8 weeks of treatment.
Currently, I have consulted with the ENT and explained the situation:
- There remains a lump in the auditory canal. Not painful and not blocking. GP and ENT are not concerned about it.
- The whooshing appears more so when I turn my head, lay down, bend over.
- Caffeine, particularly coffee, provides relief, so much so that I can barely hear it after drinking coffee, thereby explaining why my PT gets worse in the evening as I am a daily morning coffee drinker.
- When I bear down, I hear blood flow in my right ear.
- When I blow my nose, or pop my ears, the tinnitus disappears until I yawn. I can hear the eustachian tube changing positions.
- When I cover the right side of my neck, the tinnitus disappears until I uncover it; therefore, vascular in nature.
- Asymptomatic otherwise.
- Head and neck examination, in addition to full physical unremarkable. Vital signs unremarkable.
- PT SEEMS to be getting better month-over-month. There are times and places where it is less audible compared to times where it was once more audible.
I am scheduled for a CT with contrast dye at the end of this month. My ENT's rationale is to determine if there is bone dehiscience (breakdown) around the ear, or if there is a "small growth" on the eustachian tube. He says that is the gold-standard test and I am grateful he is taking this seriously and being thorough,
If anyone has an experience they wish to share or discuss, please reply. I am curious as to what the CT will uncover, if anything.
Thank you!
I first noticed pulsatile tinnitus in October 2018 and did not think anything of it at that time. Please note that this was a significantly stressful time in my personal life (I am unsure as to whether or not stress is related at this time). In the coming weeks, it became louder, possible due to my increased awareness of it. At this time, I felt a crackle when I swallowed in my right ear, pulse, and constant whoosing.
My medical history: 25 yo, Allergies to animals (I do not have any) and dust mites (4/4 on an allergy test scale).
Early January 2019: While investigating tinnitus, I was attempting to clean my ears with a q-tip. I noticed that I could not get in all the way; my external auditory canal was partially blocked. I felt a lump. Touching it with my finger and q-tip caused it to pop with blood tinged drainage. Following popping this cyst, the pulsating force went down, albeit still present, the whooshing decreased in audibility, and there is no longer a crackle when I swallow. Despite popping this abscess, there is still a small bumb on the bottom of my auditory canal.
Following treatment with antibiotics, my GP stated that my ear drum looked normal and that the lump appeared to decrease in size, just a small white bumb. My GP referred me to an ENT.
February 2019: The ENT referred my to audiology. My hearing is not impacted and the results came back normal. The only abnormality they identified was that I have eustachian tube dysfunction in both ears, with much greater severity in the right ear. I was started on mometasone (Nasonex) to reduce inflammation with to avail following 8 weeks of treatment.
Currently, I have consulted with the ENT and explained the situation:
- There remains a lump in the auditory canal. Not painful and not blocking. GP and ENT are not concerned about it.
- The whooshing appears more so when I turn my head, lay down, bend over.
- Caffeine, particularly coffee, provides relief, so much so that I can barely hear it after drinking coffee, thereby explaining why my PT gets worse in the evening as I am a daily morning coffee drinker.
- When I bear down, I hear blood flow in my right ear.
- When I blow my nose, or pop my ears, the tinnitus disappears until I yawn. I can hear the eustachian tube changing positions.
- When I cover the right side of my neck, the tinnitus disappears until I uncover it; therefore, vascular in nature.
- Asymptomatic otherwise.
- Head and neck examination, in addition to full physical unremarkable. Vital signs unremarkable.
- PT SEEMS to be getting better month-over-month. There are times and places where it is less audible compared to times where it was once more audible.
I am scheduled for a CT with contrast dye at the end of this month. My ENT's rationale is to determine if there is bone dehiscience (breakdown) around the ear, or if there is a "small growth" on the eustachian tube. He says that is the gold-standard test and I am grateful he is taking this seriously and being thorough,
If anyone has an experience they wish to share or discuss, please reply. I am curious as to what the CT will uncover, if anything.
Thank you!