I have officially lurked here for 5 months and decided it was time to share my story and seek input from the community. I am 38, would describe myself as fit and healthy but was unfortunate enough to wake up randomly on July 29th in the middle of the night to ringing in ears.
Despite my baseline norms I have juggled for years (stressful job, bruxism etc), life was business as usual and particularly low stress the night of onset.
I have only four theories of onset with one of highest consideration as it was the only "new" thing and a rare scenario wherein I was actually taking a medication.
A dental crown had been placed 1 month prior but that process was fairly uneventful.
I had fairly severe COVID-19 in 2020 and vaxed in 2021 but seemed to do OK. With the COVID-19 I did lose my sense of smell and only regained that sense about 70% over the course of 2 years (!) which we assume means some CNS component of COVID-19 for me back then.
Absolutely no hearing loss, ear infections, loud noise, tinnitus or anything otologic of any kind in my lifetime before onset.
The biggest suspicion for my onset was Nitroglycerin (RECTIV) ointment I had been taking for 6 days to deal with a colorectal issue. This medication is infamous for producing immediate headaches which I certainly experienced. Nitroglycerin being the only thing 'new' and having caused severe headaches for 6 days, it seemed an obvious trigger for tinnitus, so I stopped the medication as of the next morning with hope the ringing would just stop... of course it did not.
I have researched Nitroglycerin extensively and what is interesting is that the drug comes up more often as a potential TREATMENT for hearing loss than as a cause of it. I have gone as far as contacting the FDA and referencing the FAERS to see if other Nitroglycerin-related hearing loss or tinnitus has been reported and there exist fairly few cases. The tricky part here is that most people take Nitroglycerin for angina and WILL be on other cardiac medications that are more traditional causes of ototoxicity (e.g., Lasix) and hence attributing the tinnitus to Nitroglycerin and not Lasix could be missed. Interestingly, the drug is a nitric oxide donor thought to be protective to the cochlea, HOWEVER, at high enough doses nitric oxide converts from protective to harmful to the cochlea, combined with central hypotension, I can theorize a pathogenesis for cochlear injury. Why I struggle with my own theory as I would expect that an ototoxic SSNL would have been detectable on an audiogram and/or clinically, and/or be noticeably asymmetrical.
My tinnitus is biased to the left but is more or less a "head noise" that can range from reactive and 7/10 to a mild and almost non-existent 1-2/10 (yesterday for NYE which was a nice gift). I am clinging on to Audiology Online's favorable 'most cases will resolve in 6-12 months' data but am not naive enough to think things will really be that simple.
I am already enrolled in a program of CBT and TRT but otherwise have taken a step back from doctors after experiencing the obligatory disappointment.
I wanted to put this out there as it appears that if my theory is true (Nitroglycerin triggered my tinnitus), I might be able to help protect others from taking this medication and/or find someone for whom the cause was not known and the onset may have coincided with the use of Nitroglycerin. Additionally, it should be an important consideration in the continued investigation of Nitroglycerin as a potential treatment for hearing loss.
Thanks guys. Let's all "keep going!"
Despite my baseline norms I have juggled for years (stressful job, bruxism etc), life was business as usual and particularly low stress the night of onset.
I have only four theories of onset with one of highest consideration as it was the only "new" thing and a rare scenario wherein I was actually taking a medication.
A dental crown had been placed 1 month prior but that process was fairly uneventful.
I had fairly severe COVID-19 in 2020 and vaxed in 2021 but seemed to do OK. With the COVID-19 I did lose my sense of smell and only regained that sense about 70% over the course of 2 years (!) which we assume means some CNS component of COVID-19 for me back then.
Absolutely no hearing loss, ear infections, loud noise, tinnitus or anything otologic of any kind in my lifetime before onset.
The biggest suspicion for my onset was Nitroglycerin (RECTIV) ointment I had been taking for 6 days to deal with a colorectal issue. This medication is infamous for producing immediate headaches which I certainly experienced. Nitroglycerin being the only thing 'new' and having caused severe headaches for 6 days, it seemed an obvious trigger for tinnitus, so I stopped the medication as of the next morning with hope the ringing would just stop... of course it did not.
I have researched Nitroglycerin extensively and what is interesting is that the drug comes up more often as a potential TREATMENT for hearing loss than as a cause of it. I have gone as far as contacting the FDA and referencing the FAERS to see if other Nitroglycerin-related hearing loss or tinnitus has been reported and there exist fairly few cases. The tricky part here is that most people take Nitroglycerin for angina and WILL be on other cardiac medications that are more traditional causes of ototoxicity (e.g., Lasix) and hence attributing the tinnitus to Nitroglycerin and not Lasix could be missed. Interestingly, the drug is a nitric oxide donor thought to be protective to the cochlea, HOWEVER, at high enough doses nitric oxide converts from protective to harmful to the cochlea, combined with central hypotension, I can theorize a pathogenesis for cochlear injury. Why I struggle with my own theory as I would expect that an ototoxic SSNL would have been detectable on an audiogram and/or clinically, and/or be noticeably asymmetrical.
My tinnitus is biased to the left but is more or less a "head noise" that can range from reactive and 7/10 to a mild and almost non-existent 1-2/10 (yesterday for NYE which was a nice gift). I am clinging on to Audiology Online's favorable 'most cases will resolve in 6-12 months' data but am not naive enough to think things will really be that simple.
I am already enrolled in a program of CBT and TRT but otherwise have taken a step back from doctors after experiencing the obligatory disappointment.
I wanted to put this out there as it appears that if my theory is true (Nitroglycerin triggered my tinnitus), I might be able to help protect others from taking this medication and/or find someone for whom the cause was not known and the onset may have coincided with the use of Nitroglycerin. Additionally, it should be an important consideration in the continued investigation of Nitroglycerin as a potential treatment for hearing loss.
Thanks guys. Let's all "keep going!"