Background:
I'd always thought that the Tinnitus woke me up in the aforementioned events, however I had a thought that perhaps it was the other way around. Perhaps the fact that I was getting T was because of my sleep quality, and I was woken up because of a particularly bad episode of sleep apnea, the symptom of which would be bad T.
So I googled around to see if there could be a link between sleep apnea and SNHL & T, and I came across these two studies:
http://journals.lww.com/thehearingj....aspx?year=2012&issue=04000&article=00005#ath
http://hear-it.org/sleep-apnea-can-cause-hearing-loss
Apparently, these studies seem to suggest a correlation between hearing loss in the low & high frequencies and sleep apnea, which is exactly the type of hearing loss that I have (around 30-40 dB in the lower, and 70+ in the higher, going up to about 10 dB around 3KHz (mid range).
Now my issue is that I tried the CPAP machine for about a month and half without any positive results in terms of my sleep apnea symptoms (fatigue, memory, etc) so I returned it.
However, I have 1 month to decide if I want to take the machine back without losing about $500 on it if I were to purchase it later on (insurance stuff).
Now my question is whether you guys think it is worth going through the hassle using a CPAP machine solely for the possibility of my hearing loss/T not worsening (based on my observations and those studies)?
What would you do in my situation, assuming that you didn't care as much about the other symptoms of sleep apnea?
- I've been diagnosed with sleep apnea, roughly 30 events per hour.
- I've had sensorineural hearing loss twice, both of which happened during sleep (with increase in general T after each event)
- Once in a while (maybe once every 1-3 months), I get very loud T in the middle of the night upon waking up. These events always worry me because that was the same symptom I got from my two prior hearing losses.
I'd always thought that the Tinnitus woke me up in the aforementioned events, however I had a thought that perhaps it was the other way around. Perhaps the fact that I was getting T was because of my sleep quality, and I was woken up because of a particularly bad episode of sleep apnea, the symptom of which would be bad T.
So I googled around to see if there could be a link between sleep apnea and SNHL & T, and I came across these two studies:
http://journals.lww.com/thehearingj....aspx?year=2012&issue=04000&article=00005#ath
http://hear-it.org/sleep-apnea-can-cause-hearing-loss
Apparently, these studies seem to suggest a correlation between hearing loss in the low & high frequencies and sleep apnea, which is exactly the type of hearing loss that I have (around 30-40 dB in the lower, and 70+ in the higher, going up to about 10 dB around 3KHz (mid range).
Now my issue is that I tried the CPAP machine for about a month and half without any positive results in terms of my sleep apnea symptoms (fatigue, memory, etc) so I returned it.
However, I have 1 month to decide if I want to take the machine back without losing about $500 on it if I were to purchase it later on (insurance stuff).
Now my question is whether you guys think it is worth going through the hassle using a CPAP machine solely for the possibility of my hearing loss/T not worsening (based on my observations and those studies)?
What would you do in my situation, assuming that you didn't care as much about the other symptoms of sleep apnea?