I've been wondering about stress induced T and the most logical direction to look for a cure. I could not find a thread dealing with the stress-component in a very detailed way, so I chose to continue in this one.
I wonder if there has been some research specifically on the stress / anxiety related T.
Apologies for the long post
As stated above, just relaxing is not enough to make stress-induced T go away.
So what do we know or presume about stress and T?
- sometimes stress combined with moderate or loud noise makes T kicks in
- sometimes stress or anxiety seems to trigger T. by itself
- sometimes stress-induced T is temporary, sometimes it's there to stay
- sometimes anxiety / stress can also cause tonic tensor tympani syndrome
- hyperacusis is in part caused or worsened by stressing / fearing (loud) sound
- sometimes even our balance system blows a fuse after extended periods of stress
- we all know stress has an impact on the perceived volume of T
It's clear there's a relationship, but no one seems to know what it is exactly. That makes it very hard to look for a cure specifically for stress-induced T.
One T. theory seems plausible, at least where hearing loss is involved:
Your brain loses input from the ears, turns up the volume and there it is: T! Succesful regeneration of hair cells restores the audio input and the brain picks up a signal and turns down the dial again. That's of course what every noise induced T patient with hearing loss is hoping for. And it may just work.
For stress induced misfiring in the brain and ttts I doubt the same approach can / will work.
For those of us where stress / anxiety played an important role, I have most faith in Susan Shore's therapy of resetting the brain with impulses. Without actual damage to our hearing, there's no lack of input from our auditory system. It may just be our brain which is stuck or triggering TTTS.
But that also makes me wonder... if we do not eliminate the sources of stress and radically change our lifestyle or at least our outlook on life... I fear that even Susan's cure will only be a temporary solution for us.
Even if Susan succesfully hits the reset button in our brain, if we do not change our habits / the way we approach life... it will only be a matter of time before TTTS and even T kick in again. At least that's my theory.
Another theory is that stress / anxiety makes our hearing temporarily more sensitive and therefore easier to break or damage. In that case, there may actually be noise damage involved and we may benefit from regenerating our damaged hearing after all.
In my case it was:
Extended period of stress + loud noise = mild threshold shift + panic attack over threshold shift = T. + anxiety over loud sounds = TTTS
I have no clue whether I would have gotten my T from stress alone or if it was actually the noise and accumulated damage or hypersensitive ears that made it stick.
I guess in the end we'll just have to wait and hear... see what works for whom.
In the meantime, what are your takes on cause and effect of stress? I wonder if there has been some research specifically on the stress / anxiety related T.