- Jun 19, 2024
- 11
- Tinnitus Since
- 04/2024
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Inner ear concussion / ETD
Hello Tinnitus Talk community,
I've been lurking, reading, and finding hope in all the Success Stories from this amazing community. I thought it was about time to introduce myself and try to contribute to this extensive vault of information about tinnitus and ear issues. For the sake of brevity, I'll try to sum up everything as much as possible and include keywords for the search results.
On March 20th, 2024, I suffered head trauma / mild TBI after an accident while riding an electric Lime scooter. I slipped and hit my forehead on the metal handlebar and hit my occipital lobe when I fell backward. This caused fractures in the orbital floor of both eyes and an occipital fracture in the back of my head. There was internal brain bleeding and a cerebellar contusion. I was hospitalized on March 21st, 2024, and discharged on March 25th, 2024.
On April 20th, 2024, I woke up in the middle of the night with muffled hearing; my ears felt stuffy and clogged. During the day, I noticed a large discharge of earwax. The next night, I woke up in the middle of the night again with similar symptoms and some ear pain on the left side. That same morning, I started hearing a very loud ringing in my left ear. At the moment, I didn't pay so much attention because I had so many other symptoms from my head trauma that were a priority to take care of. Around this same time, I started experiencing parosmia, and some flavors started tasting distorted or different. As head trauma is such a complex injury, I thought they could have been related and didn't pay too much attention to it.
During the week after the onset, I noticed that the ringing would only get loud when I was lying down or sitting down. It was a very difficult week since I had to rest to recover from my injury, yet I couldn't stay still for long.
At the time, I had an appointment with an Ear ENT who specializes in head trauma, but I would only be able to see him one month later; this included a Vestibular Evaluation and an Audiometry prior to seeing him.
I did what anyone would do and got an appointment with the earliest ENT I could find. This first ENT told me that my ears were fine and that I should download an app with white noise. I did audiometry in his office. They found mild hearing loss in my left ear. He said that was the reason for the ringing and that I should get used to it.
As the following week went by, my symptoms intensified: I couldn't equalize my ears, I had fleeting moments of pain in my left ear, swollen lymph nodes in my neck, the feeling of water or liquid inside my ears, and the feeling of talking inside my head. When I tapped my head, it sounded as if I was tapping a drum. The same happened with my changes in taste and smell. I knew it was time to get a second opinion immediately.
The second ENT did a more thorough evaluation that included using a camera to watch inside my nose and diagnosed me with Eustachian Tube Dysfunction. He squirted a decongestant liquid inside my nose with a pressurized hose, prescribed me a 6-day Medrol Pak (Methylprednisolone), and gave me three refills. As I mentioned the smell and taste issues, he suggested I probably had COVID-19 after my hospitalization or some viral infection. He told me that the hearing loss from the audiometry was normal and wouldn't cause tinnitus, much less at my age: 41 years.
After I began taking the Medrol Pak, I experienced immediate relief about 24 hours later. The ringing during the day disappeared, the liquid from my ears drained, and the feeling of stuffiness resolved completely. When I woke up in the morning, I could only hear a slight staticky noise inside my head. My taste and smell slowly started coming back. After finishing the Medrol Pak, I thought my crusade was over.
About ten days later, the ringing came back in full force, desperate. I reached out to the second ENT and asked him if it was OK to do a second Medrol Pak. He said yes, it's not ideal, but if I had experienced complete resolution of symptoms, I should give it a shot. So I did. Two days later, everything was gone again. My sense of smell and taste were almost fully recovered; as of today, I'd say they are 99% recovered.
As I was finishing this Medrol Pak, I went to the appointment with the original ENT, who specializes in Head Trauma. He reviewed all the CT and MRI scans I had done and prescribed another Inner Ear MRI scan. I was still experiencing dizziness and very mild vertigo from the injury at the time. This was a 90-minute appointment that included his experience with head injury (he is a professor at the local university), the contribution of a fellow who is studying under him, and my wife (who happens to be a family physician). He believes the hearing loss is so mild that it can't be responsible for the tinnitus. Also, that's within the normal parameters.
He then decided to do five Dexamethasone shots in my left ear, spaced every two weeks. He believes there's inflammation of the auditory nerve potentially caused by the head trauma or a viral infection, but he can't be sure. What he can be sure of is that, due to the symptoms, it's the auditory nerve.
A couple of days after the intratympanic steroid injection in my left ear, I experienced 90% remission of all dizziness and vertigo that were still lingering after the head injury. Particularly when lying down on a flat surface. About a week later, I began experiencing silence for the first time in almost two months, to the point that I started getting confident that it would eventually clear up with this treatment.
I also visited my Primary Care / Family Physician a few days after the steroid injection; I needed to start making sense of all this. I told him the whole story, and he agreed that the most likely cause for the ringing was inflammation and that it was probably connected to the head injury, even if it manifested itself a month later. I should be patient, and it will heal with time. He prescribed Nasal Steroids and Zyrtec (Cetirizine) daily. I am due to see him again in July.
My tinnitus now goes on and off. It's somewhat quiet and can mostly be heard in absolute silence. When this whole ordeal started, it was a 5/10. Nowadays, it lingers between a 0.5 and 1/10. Sometimes, it spikes to a 2/10 but then settles back. I am now even able to hear the ringing in my right ear at times, which is very quiet.
As of now, I am a bit scared that it will come back in full force; I can't deny it. I noticed I've been sleeping better and haven't been waking up three or four times a night as in the early days.
I am visiting the ENT tomorrow for my second Dexamethasone injection. I will ask to have a shot in my right ear as well as update this thread with the results, hoping it could help someone else who experiences a similar situation in the future.
As a side note, I also visit an acupuncturist once a week and take herbal supplements. He used to be a Traditional Chinese Medicine ENT in China; he practices acupuncture here in the US. I have also noticed that getting back to working out and getting my heart rate up after being sedentary for so long is helping with healing the ears. This could be a pure placebo, though. I take Melatonin and Magnesium every night before bed, which still regulate my sleep cycle post-injury.
I've been lurking, reading, and finding hope in all the Success Stories from this amazing community. I thought it was about time to introduce myself and try to contribute to this extensive vault of information about tinnitus and ear issues. For the sake of brevity, I'll try to sum up everything as much as possible and include keywords for the search results.
On March 20th, 2024, I suffered head trauma / mild TBI after an accident while riding an electric Lime scooter. I slipped and hit my forehead on the metal handlebar and hit my occipital lobe when I fell backward. This caused fractures in the orbital floor of both eyes and an occipital fracture in the back of my head. There was internal brain bleeding and a cerebellar contusion. I was hospitalized on March 21st, 2024, and discharged on March 25th, 2024.
On April 20th, 2024, I woke up in the middle of the night with muffled hearing; my ears felt stuffy and clogged. During the day, I noticed a large discharge of earwax. The next night, I woke up in the middle of the night again with similar symptoms and some ear pain on the left side. That same morning, I started hearing a very loud ringing in my left ear. At the moment, I didn't pay so much attention because I had so many other symptoms from my head trauma that were a priority to take care of. Around this same time, I started experiencing parosmia, and some flavors started tasting distorted or different. As head trauma is such a complex injury, I thought they could have been related and didn't pay too much attention to it.
During the week after the onset, I noticed that the ringing would only get loud when I was lying down or sitting down. It was a very difficult week since I had to rest to recover from my injury, yet I couldn't stay still for long.
At the time, I had an appointment with an Ear ENT who specializes in head trauma, but I would only be able to see him one month later; this included a Vestibular Evaluation and an Audiometry prior to seeing him.
I did what anyone would do and got an appointment with the earliest ENT I could find. This first ENT told me that my ears were fine and that I should download an app with white noise. I did audiometry in his office. They found mild hearing loss in my left ear. He said that was the reason for the ringing and that I should get used to it.
As the following week went by, my symptoms intensified: I couldn't equalize my ears, I had fleeting moments of pain in my left ear, swollen lymph nodes in my neck, the feeling of water or liquid inside my ears, and the feeling of talking inside my head. When I tapped my head, it sounded as if I was tapping a drum. The same happened with my changes in taste and smell. I knew it was time to get a second opinion immediately.
The second ENT did a more thorough evaluation that included using a camera to watch inside my nose and diagnosed me with Eustachian Tube Dysfunction. He squirted a decongestant liquid inside my nose with a pressurized hose, prescribed me a 6-day Medrol Pak (Methylprednisolone), and gave me three refills. As I mentioned the smell and taste issues, he suggested I probably had COVID-19 after my hospitalization or some viral infection. He told me that the hearing loss from the audiometry was normal and wouldn't cause tinnitus, much less at my age: 41 years.
After I began taking the Medrol Pak, I experienced immediate relief about 24 hours later. The ringing during the day disappeared, the liquid from my ears drained, and the feeling of stuffiness resolved completely. When I woke up in the morning, I could only hear a slight staticky noise inside my head. My taste and smell slowly started coming back. After finishing the Medrol Pak, I thought my crusade was over.
About ten days later, the ringing came back in full force, desperate. I reached out to the second ENT and asked him if it was OK to do a second Medrol Pak. He said yes, it's not ideal, but if I had experienced complete resolution of symptoms, I should give it a shot. So I did. Two days later, everything was gone again. My sense of smell and taste were almost fully recovered; as of today, I'd say they are 99% recovered.
As I was finishing this Medrol Pak, I went to the appointment with the original ENT, who specializes in Head Trauma. He reviewed all the CT and MRI scans I had done and prescribed another Inner Ear MRI scan. I was still experiencing dizziness and very mild vertigo from the injury at the time. This was a 90-minute appointment that included his experience with head injury (he is a professor at the local university), the contribution of a fellow who is studying under him, and my wife (who happens to be a family physician). He believes the hearing loss is so mild that it can't be responsible for the tinnitus. Also, that's within the normal parameters.
He then decided to do five Dexamethasone shots in my left ear, spaced every two weeks. He believes there's inflammation of the auditory nerve potentially caused by the head trauma or a viral infection, but he can't be sure. What he can be sure of is that, due to the symptoms, it's the auditory nerve.
A couple of days after the intratympanic steroid injection in my left ear, I experienced 90% remission of all dizziness and vertigo that were still lingering after the head injury. Particularly when lying down on a flat surface. About a week later, I began experiencing silence for the first time in almost two months, to the point that I started getting confident that it would eventually clear up with this treatment.
I also visited my Primary Care / Family Physician a few days after the steroid injection; I needed to start making sense of all this. I told him the whole story, and he agreed that the most likely cause for the ringing was inflammation and that it was probably connected to the head injury, even if it manifested itself a month later. I should be patient, and it will heal with time. He prescribed Nasal Steroids and Zyrtec (Cetirizine) daily. I am due to see him again in July.
My tinnitus now goes on and off. It's somewhat quiet and can mostly be heard in absolute silence. When this whole ordeal started, it was a 5/10. Nowadays, it lingers between a 0.5 and 1/10. Sometimes, it spikes to a 2/10 but then settles back. I am now even able to hear the ringing in my right ear at times, which is very quiet.
As of now, I am a bit scared that it will come back in full force; I can't deny it. I noticed I've been sleeping better and haven't been waking up three or four times a night as in the early days.
I am visiting the ENT tomorrow for my second Dexamethasone injection. I will ask to have a shot in my right ear as well as update this thread with the results, hoping it could help someone else who experiences a similar situation in the future.
As a side note, I also visit an acupuncturist once a week and take herbal supplements. He used to be a Traditional Chinese Medicine ENT in China; he practices acupuncture here in the US. I have also noticed that getting back to working out and getting my heart rate up after being sedentary for so long is helping with healing the ears. This could be a pure placebo, though. I take Melatonin and Magnesium every night before bed, which still regulate my sleep cycle post-injury.