Dear everyone,
My name is Rinz. A tinnitus veteran of 20 years. I posted a couple of times on the forum over the last years. Basically I have been able to lead my life normally without being bothered (too much) by tinnitus. However, since yesterday morning a new buzzing sound appeared in my head which is now constantly there.
I have posted earlier that (since 2019) I have become sensitive to particular frequencies (they seem to get louder in my brain; maybe hyperacusis?) for example frequencies around 330 Hz somehow get amplified. This was no huge problem, because I could try to avoid these frequencies if I encountered them (like not play a certain key on a piano or something).
However, I now discovered the craziest thing with the new buzzing sound (which is quite penetrating and irritating) I can make it almost completely disappear if I play a sine-wave tone of around 180 Hz. So, I play the tone, the buzzing is off, but the moment I turn the sine-wave tone of, its there again. This, to me, seems related to my sensitivity for particular frequencies. What I mean is, it seems not simply to be a "new sound" (perhaps instigated due to trauma or whatever) but it really seems related to particular parameters of my hearing system.
I have to say that I have been under some stress for the last month as I have been moving from one country back to my home country. So, I was willing to accept (before discovering I could simply turn it off) that it was due to stress and I should be patient and life will return to normal after a while (which is my normal coping strategy).
Why I think this buzzing might not dissipate so easily, is because the other "frequency sensitive" parameters have not improved since I discovered them. In other words, I did not get "less sensitive" to frequencies around 300 Hz. However, if they were not there, it was also no problem (I didn't hear any buzzing or something).
So, the new part is therefore that I hear buzzing in absence of a certain frequency (roughly 180 Hz, so maybe sine-wave sounds around 178 Hz~182 Hz). What does this mean in your opinion? Could it for example be that a specific hair cell (or set of hair cells) is damaged (say the hair cells around 180 Hz) but if I present a sound in a similar frequency range, those hair cells start buzzing and make the damaged hair cells fire once again?
I mean, maybe I am wrong (I am not a doctor or audiologist) but I thought many scientists believe that tinnitus sounds are caused by the brain expecting a certain input but in its absence start pumping up the gain to listen for that specific input and this is what causes tinnitus. So, somehow my brain might have started to get deprived for sounds around 180hz and it its absence turned open the gain for this specific frequency?
I just wondered whether some of you have the same experience that turning on/off a certain frequency really blocks or instigates a buzzing sound in your brain.
QUESTION: Would you recommend that I turn on 180 Hz for the night so I can get some sleep? or do you think it might be unwise/dangerous for me to continuously listen to a sine-wave sound of a specific frequency? Could that damage my system even further?
Lastly, what are your thoughts of it disappearing by itself? I have had loud buzzing sounds in the past though they were not as irritating or present as this one (and I did not check at that time I could turn them off using a certain frequency).
Thank you very much for any insight you could provide. Naturally, I will visit a doctor/audiologist next week any tips on foods/drinks to use (or to avoid) in the mean while with respect to damaging hair cells?
Kind regards,
Rinz
My name is Rinz. A tinnitus veteran of 20 years. I posted a couple of times on the forum over the last years. Basically I have been able to lead my life normally without being bothered (too much) by tinnitus. However, since yesterday morning a new buzzing sound appeared in my head which is now constantly there.
I have posted earlier that (since 2019) I have become sensitive to particular frequencies (they seem to get louder in my brain; maybe hyperacusis?) for example frequencies around 330 Hz somehow get amplified. This was no huge problem, because I could try to avoid these frequencies if I encountered them (like not play a certain key on a piano or something).
However, I now discovered the craziest thing with the new buzzing sound (which is quite penetrating and irritating) I can make it almost completely disappear if I play a sine-wave tone of around 180 Hz. So, I play the tone, the buzzing is off, but the moment I turn the sine-wave tone of, its there again. This, to me, seems related to my sensitivity for particular frequencies. What I mean is, it seems not simply to be a "new sound" (perhaps instigated due to trauma or whatever) but it really seems related to particular parameters of my hearing system.
I have to say that I have been under some stress for the last month as I have been moving from one country back to my home country. So, I was willing to accept (before discovering I could simply turn it off) that it was due to stress and I should be patient and life will return to normal after a while (which is my normal coping strategy).
Why I think this buzzing might not dissipate so easily, is because the other "frequency sensitive" parameters have not improved since I discovered them. In other words, I did not get "less sensitive" to frequencies around 300 Hz. However, if they were not there, it was also no problem (I didn't hear any buzzing or something).
So, the new part is therefore that I hear buzzing in absence of a certain frequency (roughly 180 Hz, so maybe sine-wave sounds around 178 Hz~182 Hz). What does this mean in your opinion? Could it for example be that a specific hair cell (or set of hair cells) is damaged (say the hair cells around 180 Hz) but if I present a sound in a similar frequency range, those hair cells start buzzing and make the damaged hair cells fire once again?
I mean, maybe I am wrong (I am not a doctor or audiologist) but I thought many scientists believe that tinnitus sounds are caused by the brain expecting a certain input but in its absence start pumping up the gain to listen for that specific input and this is what causes tinnitus. So, somehow my brain might have started to get deprived for sounds around 180hz and it its absence turned open the gain for this specific frequency?
I just wondered whether some of you have the same experience that turning on/off a certain frequency really blocks or instigates a buzzing sound in your brain.
QUESTION: Would you recommend that I turn on 180 Hz for the night so I can get some sleep? or do you think it might be unwise/dangerous for me to continuously listen to a sine-wave sound of a specific frequency? Could that damage my system even further?
Lastly, what are your thoughts of it disappearing by itself? I have had loud buzzing sounds in the past though they were not as irritating or present as this one (and I did not check at that time I could turn them off using a certain frequency).
Thank you very much for any insight you could provide. Naturally, I will visit a doctor/audiologist next week any tips on foods/drinks to use (or to avoid) in the mean while with respect to damaging hair cells?
Kind regards,
Rinz