Mark Foster
Member
- May 1, 2019
- 13
- Tinnitus Since
- Feb 2019
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Noise exposure (a loud concert)
Managed to get my first out of 3 injection today, it was just fine!
My tongue is a bit numb now, but I feel ok.
Unfortunately the ENT didn't want to do it in both ears, so I only did it on the ear that rings the most.
I'll keep you updated.
so I hope the Oxygen Therapy and the Steroids helped, but it might just have been spontaneous recovery.
I have been lucky of course, but I'm starting to think the internet is a bit too negative about tinnitus, of course there are a lot of sufferers, but it seems like the majority recovers fairly well after a noise trauma? That's also what 2 ENTs told me, and I didn't believe them, given all the stuff I read here, but now I do.
.... I have been lucky of course, but I'm starting to think the internet is a bit too negative about tinnitus, of course there are a lot of sufferers, but it seems like the majority recovers fairly well after a noise trauma? That's also what 2 ENTs told me, and I didn't believe them, given all the stuff I read here, but now I do.
No. I disagree. The internet is NOT too negative about T. The majority of sufferers do NOT recover.
Your disagreement with me is out-of-the-original-context.That is incorrect. This impression is due to the sampling bias of the forum: https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/spontaneous-recovery-stats-many-recover-3-studies.21441/
High Dose of Intratympanic Steroids for Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss Salvage.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
Intratympanic (IT) steroid administration for sudden sensorineural hearing loss is offered as salvage to patients who failed systemic steroid treatment. Our objective was to study the audiometric and clinical outcomes of patients given salvage therapy with high-dose IT steroids instilled via ventilation tube.
STUDY DESIGN:
Retrospective case review.
SETTING:
Academic secondary medical center.
PATIENTS:
One hundred three patients >18 years of age with sudden sensorineural hearing loss who failed systemic steroids and received IT treatment between 2010 and 2018.
INTERVENTION:
Following ventilation tube insertion, 1 ml of 10 mg/ml dexamethasone was instilled, twice daily, for 7 days.
OUTCOME MEASURES:
Hearing assessment immediately before and after treatment. Tinnitus and vertigo complaints and risk factors were also retrieved.
RESULTS:
Tinnitus had improved in 53 (52%) patients, vertigo in 4 (4%), and aural fullness sensation in 56 (55%) (p < 0.001, p = 0.344, p < 0.001, respectively). The mean pure-tone threshold difference across frequencies following treatment was between 0 and 6 dB. A significant improvement was observed at 250, 500, 1000 Hz (p < 0.001 in all), and at 2000 Hz (p = 0.035). No significant difference was found at 4000 and 8000 Hz (p = 0.055, p = 0.983 respectively). Mean pure-tone average improvement of 4.5 dB was detected in 61 (59%) patients (p = 0.001). The mean speech discrimination score improved by 7% (p = 0.001). Four (22%) diabetic and nine (20%) hypertensive patients had pure-tone average ≥10 dB improvement (p = 0.759, p = 0.852 respectively).
CONCLUSION:
Although more than half of the patients improved clinically, the significance of the slight audiometric improvement should be weighed against the treatment protocol's complications.
https://journals.lww.com/otology-ne...e_of_Intratympanic_Steroids_for_Sudden.7.aspx
I think that question would best be answered by a doctor, preferably an ENT, than anyone on here.I have a box of pills, prednisone, expired 06/19 which I haven't used. Now I am thinking about taking it for my acoustic trauma. Is it okay still or should I go ask for a new box?
Hi All.
I need some reassurance about prednisolone if possible as I have got myself in a bit of a state....
Thank you for your response. I think you are right and it is not the Prednisolone. As you know with this condition you worry so much about every little change and like you even the slightest quick change sends me into worry.As you said, there's no way to know for sure since tinnitus can be so random. But I was on three courses of oral prednisone earlier this year (in attempts to improve or salvage hearing loss) and I noticed no change in my own high-tone tinnitus. I think you're right that the more likely culprits are lack of sleep and work stress.
My main tinnitus issues are the high tone (constant) and the warble/buzz effect when exposed to speech, crowd noise, music, etc. But every once in awhile I'll get a new tone at a different frequency in addition to the usual one, and while those go away under a minute I always fear they'll stay. That happened this morning, in fact. FWIW I got very little sleep last night.
(Prednisone and prednisolone are "Both steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs belonging to the drug class "corticosteroids". " There are differences but that's what I know.)
Advice with LOTS of prednisolone experience:Any advice would be great as I am still worrying the Prednisolone may have caused a spike that will never go away or that maybe it is going back to baseline for a bit and I got used to not having it as loud as normal for a while.
Thank you so much that makes perfect sense and I am going to try and get back to where I was a couple of weeks ago when it did improve a bit. The not focusing helped then and I need to do that again. That's great re the tinnitus returning to baseline and to be honest I think it is not far off just think where it went for a bit I got used to that. Thanks again so much.Advice with LOTS of prednisolone experience:
Your tinnitus WILL go back to baseline about 1-2 weeks after you are no longer taking prednisolone.
But I warn you now. If you keep analyzing your tinnitus and listening to it constantly ("is it better or worse now"), you are able to imprint the spike into your brain forever. So DO NOT listen to your tinnitus. Use masking.
I am not a doctor etc. but this is a typical dose and similar to all three of the courses I was on.Dose was 40 mg made up of eight 5 mg tabs. Starting today and tomorrow I take seven, then six for two days and so on until down to zero.
Thanks and how was you experience with the Prednisone?I am not a doctor etc. but this is a typical dose and similar to all three of the courses I was on.
Thanks and how was you experience with the Prednisone?
Thanks Chris. Really appreciate your detailed response.First of all, my body tolerated it well--I didn't have any side effects, although that's not guaranteed for everyone.
Secondly, I think I said above that it didn't affect my tinnitus but on reflection I can't be sure of that. Because in I think two out of three treatments, it actually declined slighted after starting on the drug. That could definitely be a placebo effect. Tinnitus later revived closer to its earlier levels (while I was still on prednisone, in at least one case). FWIW I've lately experienced medium-high to medium tinnitus, with occasional new sounds that have left, although a new sort of "shining" sound has become more evident in my left ear (the bad one), in addition to the pure tone. That new tone goes away most of the time when I hear noise or speech etc.
All of which is to say, in the final analysis I don't think it affected my tinnitus at all. But it also didn't hurt me.
I took prednisone the first time to see if it would help restore additional hearing loss I experienced after the first loss was measured by the audiologist (I sensed more loss). My hearing did improve back to the baseline level in that case. The second time was for the same reason, but not only did my hearing not return to the initial loss-baseline, it actually was worse! The third time was for a similar additional decline, and in that case my hearing returned more closely to the original loss baseline.
The upshot is, as my ENTs noted, there's really no way to know if prednisone helped any of the above. I later even got a steroid shot through my eardrum, another long shot (especially because of the time that passed) that didn't help. But others have had better results. When an old friend of mine suffered sudden hearing loss (as I did), she got the eardrum shot quickly, and had a complete recovery. With this stuff, you never know.
Edit: All of my doses were tapered, though one of them had slightly different doses. The second one was pretty dang strong, according to the highly experienced nurse practitioner who administered it.
Thanks Chris. Really appreciate your detailed response.
It's so hard to know what is and what isn't working at any given time as some many factors play a part in tinnitus.
I think the Prednisolone is making me really depressed and I am having bad thoughts. I just don't feel myself at all at the moment. I have been told to taper down 5mg every two days after this 6 day course of 40 mgs. I really want to quit cold turkey as I am worried sick that the Prednisolone could be making my tinnitus worse or when rational this could be due to my anxiety. I was even thinking of doing a 10 mg reduction each day instead of 5 every two days as I want this out of my system but worried even that could make things worse. If anyone has any further advice that would be great as I am in a very dark place right now.
Thanks Chris. That's most helpful.I'm very sorry to hear you're having a tough time. Speaking only as a fellow-patient, without talking to a doctor I strongly advise against suddenly stopping the prednisolone, which can lead to some serious side effects. At the same time, this drug can absolutely cause depression as well, so you're not imagining that (obviously, you're saying to yourself lol).
What you should do is contact the doctor or practice that prescribed the drug and let them know what's going on, and they certainly have had patients with this side effect and are your best source for working on how to handle it. I don't know if doing the 10mg reduction would be a better exit--but neither do you. Ask, do not self-prescribe, and I think you may find that even just talking about it will help.
Depression is nothing to be trifled with, so hang on through this temporary dark moment.
Thanks Chris. That's most helpful.
I was at the doc's today that prescribed as per my earlier post. As it has only been 6 or 7 days on a medium dose the doctor said no taper needed which I did before and was fine apart from some tiredness with.
I am currently more depressed than I have ever been due to thinking the tinnitus spike I have at the moment won't go now that I'm off the Prednisolone. I'm also panicking in case I do get bad withdrawals.
Sorry for being so honest above I just don't know what to do.
Thanks Chris. That's a massive help and very true.If you're under the care of a doctor--and it sure sounds you are--you should pay attention to whatever he or she says. Feeling concerned is normal, but if the doctor said no taper is needed, believe it. I know it's very easy for me to say, but try to take it one day at a time. If you--if anyone--contemplates every bad thing that can happen going forward, it gets overwhelming. Focus on the "now."