- Sep 2, 2017
- 32
- Tinnitus Since
- 08/2017
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Noise exposure in a cinema
Hello, everyone!
I joined these boards about a month ago and made an introductory post about a week after an event that I had believed to cause my tinnitus. I had initially believed my tinnitus to have been caused by an acoustic trauma. To sum it up, I went to see the movie Dunkirk in standard non-IMAX format on August 26th. I noticed it seemed pretty loud and started to cover my ears part way through. Once I got out, I looked up to see if anyone else felt it was loud and found some posts on Tinnitus Talk about it that kind of freaked me out. I noticed a feeling of fullness in only my left ear at this time. I carried on about my weekend and even mowed the lawn. I felt a little "off" and kind of ill (I sometimes have bad allergies), but carried on and went to work on Monday. I decided to see my doctor Monday afternoon just in case. He prescribed me a 9-day course of Prednisone per standard procedure. I started this on Tuesday, August 29th.
Unfortunately, I had a near psychotic reaction to the Prednisone. It started off making me feel kind of jittery, but on Thursday (2 days in), I became extremely depressed and obsessed with a fear of tinnitus (I hadn't noticed any ringing at this point). I went home early with a bad headache, then started hearing a high-pitched ringing in my left ear (similar to the back of an old CRT TV). I didn't freak out too much about this because I used to have ringing like this before with bad headaches. Only this one didn't go away when the headache ended. I spiraled big time and feared the worse. I continued the Prednisone, but it didn't seem to do anything other than make me more depressed.
Once I got off of the Prednisone, my mood improved dramatically. I began to feel that I could handle it and felt that it might go away. I started to go for minutes at a time without noticing it. That is until a co-worker sneezed extremely loud at his desk facing me (my right side). My right ear felt full and I again went into a panic. I got another course of Prednisone after this as a safe measure (probably a bad idea after the first time). This again sent me into deep anxiety. A few days after this second exposure (a few days into this dose), I noticed a different pitch of ringing on my right side as well. The ringing in my left ear also got much more noticable during this second dose. I am now 3 days off of the second dose. The ringing in my right ear is still there, but the left ear noises seem to be changing.
My question is, does this actually sound like two acoustic traumas? I asked my ENT about Prednisone and he says that it can (ironically) cause ringing in the ears.
I've read about the effects of Prednisone lingering for up to 3 weeks, so I was wondering if anyone else has had this experience with Prednisone.
I think that the thing that I can't get my head around is how an acoustic trauma could be caused by a movie?
I've attended several concerts in the past and played drums in a band, listened to music fairly loudly in my car with no issues. Something as simple as a movies doesn't seem like it would be enough to do this to me by comparison.
Also, I had a hearing test (up to 8000 Hz) following both exposures with no hearing loss on either.
Thank you for the help and sorry for the extremely long post!
I joined these boards about a month ago and made an introductory post about a week after an event that I had believed to cause my tinnitus. I had initially believed my tinnitus to have been caused by an acoustic trauma. To sum it up, I went to see the movie Dunkirk in standard non-IMAX format on August 26th. I noticed it seemed pretty loud and started to cover my ears part way through. Once I got out, I looked up to see if anyone else felt it was loud and found some posts on Tinnitus Talk about it that kind of freaked me out. I noticed a feeling of fullness in only my left ear at this time. I carried on about my weekend and even mowed the lawn. I felt a little "off" and kind of ill (I sometimes have bad allergies), but carried on and went to work on Monday. I decided to see my doctor Monday afternoon just in case. He prescribed me a 9-day course of Prednisone per standard procedure. I started this on Tuesday, August 29th.
Unfortunately, I had a near psychotic reaction to the Prednisone. It started off making me feel kind of jittery, but on Thursday (2 days in), I became extremely depressed and obsessed with a fear of tinnitus (I hadn't noticed any ringing at this point). I went home early with a bad headache, then started hearing a high-pitched ringing in my left ear (similar to the back of an old CRT TV). I didn't freak out too much about this because I used to have ringing like this before with bad headaches. Only this one didn't go away when the headache ended. I spiraled big time and feared the worse. I continued the Prednisone, but it didn't seem to do anything other than make me more depressed.
Once I got off of the Prednisone, my mood improved dramatically. I began to feel that I could handle it and felt that it might go away. I started to go for minutes at a time without noticing it. That is until a co-worker sneezed extremely loud at his desk facing me (my right side). My right ear felt full and I again went into a panic. I got another course of Prednisone after this as a safe measure (probably a bad idea after the first time). This again sent me into deep anxiety. A few days after this second exposure (a few days into this dose), I noticed a different pitch of ringing on my right side as well. The ringing in my left ear also got much more noticable during this second dose. I am now 3 days off of the second dose. The ringing in my right ear is still there, but the left ear noises seem to be changing.
My question is, does this actually sound like two acoustic traumas? I asked my ENT about Prednisone and he says that it can (ironically) cause ringing in the ears.
I've read about the effects of Prednisone lingering for up to 3 weeks, so I was wondering if anyone else has had this experience with Prednisone.
I think that the thing that I can't get my head around is how an acoustic trauma could be caused by a movie?
I've attended several concerts in the past and played drums in a band, listened to music fairly loudly in my car with no issues. Something as simple as a movies doesn't seem like it would be enough to do this to me by comparison.
Also, I had a hearing test (up to 8000 Hz) following both exposures with no hearing loss on either.
Thank you for the help and sorry for the extremely long post!