- Oct 30, 2020
- 598
- Tinnitus Since
- 10/2020
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Noise (likely headphones & cars), Acoustic trauma did me in
Thank you so much @Damocles for chiming in!
I personally don't believe tinnitus loudness is in direct correlation to the amount of hearing loss, although it's a major factor. I think spikes caused by the sensitivity of the auditory system can in turn generate more hyper-active neurons, i.e. increased loudness, without permanent structural damage done to the inner ear. There you go, just a theory of mine.
The problem is, I'm pretty sure that I'd increase my tinnitus permanently if I were to ditch the earplugs for a day, because my fridge humming which is below 30 dB from where I sit. There's no way on earth that would cause damage to the inner ear, but the sensitivity is just so ridiculous. It would be comparable to the previous experiment with pink noise I did, or driving a car with double protection - the aftermath is just insane.
I'm still waiting for my pink noise spike to recede, and if it does, I'm going to try another approach; using quick sounds for desensitisation, since I don't really spike to those. But we'll see.
Thanks again,
All the best to you,
Stacken
Definatily, man.Me and you really need to talk one day
I partially agree with this. In my own experience, dropping a spoon wont even cause a spike because I don't spike to low-moderate noises with a duration below ~3 seconds. It's when the duration is longer that it causes spikes, and the longer the duration, the more severe the spike is. I've had times where I engaged in conversations for 1 hour (with deeply inserted foam earplugs) and it has caused prolonged worsenings, most likely permanent ones, but as we know, it shouldn't have caused damage or hearing loss.2) everyday noise around your house (dropping of a spoon for example) will not permanently worsen your tinnitus
I personally don't believe tinnitus loudness is in direct correlation to the amount of hearing loss, although it's a major factor. I think spikes caused by the sensitivity of the auditory system can in turn generate more hyper-active neurons, i.e. increased loudness, without permanent structural damage done to the inner ear. There you go, just a theory of mine.
The problem is, I'm pretty sure that I'd increase my tinnitus permanently if I were to ditch the earplugs for a day, because my fridge humming which is below 30 dB from where I sit. There's no way on earth that would cause damage to the inner ear, but the sensitivity is just so ridiculous. It would be comparable to the previous experiment with pink noise I did, or driving a car with double protection - the aftermath is just insane.
I'm still waiting for my pink noise spike to recede, and if it does, I'm going to try another approach; using quick sounds for desensitisation, since I don't really spike to those. But we'll see.
Thanks again,
All the best to you,
Stacken