- Jul 18, 2020
- 1
- Tinnitus Since
- 1992
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Damage during surgery to insert tubes to drain retracted ear
Hi everyone. I've been suffering from tinnitus since I was about 10 years old. I have a history of several severe bouts of otitis media, with both eardrums rupturing in early childhood. I have no hearing loss as measured by an ENT, but I have reduced ability to screen background noise, say in a crowded restaurant, because I'm trying to hear through a constant auditory haze of ringing sound.
I can live with that, it's been decades. What is really diminishing my quality of life now, though, is a long term muscle spasm in my right lumbar musculature, I would guess the iliocostalis. You know how when someone scratches their fingernails down a chalkboard or makes styrofoam squeak how many people will have an involuntary muscle twitch like they'll shudder or turn away from the sound? I get that feeling in my inferior thoracic to inferior lumbar spine. It's a feeling almost like I'm being tickled or tapped along the right side of my spine but in the muscular, fatty part of the back.
If I press on that area with my hand it offers some relief kind of like how hot water in a big bite will relieve the itching for the duration of the soak. But just like an itchy bug bite, as soon as I remove pressure from my hand, the tingling discomfort returns.
This is 100% triggered by tinnitus. I'm okay if I sleep on my back because my lower back is pressed against the bed. But if I sleep on my left side, the sheets brush against my back and exacerbate the sensation. If I sleep on my right side, the ear with tinnitus is pressed right against my pillow and it's the only thing I hear and my back goes nuts with twitching. I can sort of was pillows up to support my neck but leave my ear off the pillow, but it's not comfortable and is messing up my neck.
Over the years I've looked and looked for information about back pain or myoclonus in the back associated with tinnitus, but my searches have been fruitless.
I'm hoping either the doctor here will have some experience having seen this before or some other sufferer will have had the same experience and solved it somehow. At the very least, it would be nice to know I'm not alone or medically unique.
I can live with that, it's been decades. What is really diminishing my quality of life now, though, is a long term muscle spasm in my right lumbar musculature, I would guess the iliocostalis. You know how when someone scratches their fingernails down a chalkboard or makes styrofoam squeak how many people will have an involuntary muscle twitch like they'll shudder or turn away from the sound? I get that feeling in my inferior thoracic to inferior lumbar spine. It's a feeling almost like I'm being tickled or tapped along the right side of my spine but in the muscular, fatty part of the back.
If I press on that area with my hand it offers some relief kind of like how hot water in a big bite will relieve the itching for the duration of the soak. But just like an itchy bug bite, as soon as I remove pressure from my hand, the tingling discomfort returns.
This is 100% triggered by tinnitus. I'm okay if I sleep on my back because my lower back is pressed against the bed. But if I sleep on my left side, the sheets brush against my back and exacerbate the sensation. If I sleep on my right side, the ear with tinnitus is pressed right against my pillow and it's the only thing I hear and my back goes nuts with twitching. I can sort of was pillows up to support my neck but leave my ear off the pillow, but it's not comfortable and is messing up my neck.
Over the years I've looked and looked for information about back pain or myoclonus in the back associated with tinnitus, but my searches have been fruitless.
I'm hoping either the doctor here will have some experience having seen this before or some other sufferer will have had the same experience and solved it somehow. At the very least, it would be nice to know I'm not alone or medically unique.