You can get extended release Xanax.I'd rather take something extended with a higher half-life then constantly taking the pills when I panic
You can get extended release Xanax.I'd rather take something extended with a higher half-life then constantly taking the pills when I panic
I don't get how people are getting things like Xanax. What doctor do people get those meds from? I've not been able to get any of that and I have to also deal with being electrocuted every day because of my spinal cord injury and am in severe pain.You can get extended release Xanax.
Xanax and other benzos are still widely prescribed all over the world, they are one of the most commonly prescribed drugs. But they are not given out like candy anymore in many developed countries.I don't get how people are getting things like Xanax. What doctor do people get those meds from? I've not been able to get any of that and I have to also deal with being electrocuted every day because of my spinal cord injury and am in severe pain.
Maybe Vanderbilt?Are there any good neurologists in Tennessee? Not just strictly tinnitus, but general neurology?
Primary care providers.I don't get how people are getting things like Xanax. What doctor do people get those meds from?
A PCP will most likely only give you a temporary prescription until you see a psychiatrist.Primary care providers.
I started taking Xanax before it became so restricted but my doctor has been willing to continue prescribing it. If I were to ask for it now, I think it would be impossible to get.I don't get how people are getting things like Xanax. What doctor do people get those meds from? I've not been able to get any of that and I have to also deal with being electrocuted every day because of my spinal cord injury and am in severe pain.
Not my experience.A PCP will most likely only give you a temporary prescription until you see a psychiatrist.
It also matters who you are and how you present yourself. Weren't you some kind of high level intelligence officer, so obviously doctors are more likely to prescribe it to you (and not suspect you abuse it or sell on the streets) vs. someone poor on disability coming in dirty clothes to the appt.Not my experience.
Not high level and not intelligence but basically that's my story, so yes, no doubt when I go into my Doc's office and I tell her I need an Rx for this torture in hopes of improving my QoL, she isn't questioning my need, my state of mind, or that I'm selling pills on the street.It also matters who you are and how you present yourself. Weren't you some kind of high level intelligence officer, so obviously doctors are more likely to prescribe it to you (and not suspect you abuse it or sell on the streets) vs. someone poor on disability coming in dirty clothes to the appt.
Sorry to see you in this thread. What is your story and your struggle?Never would have thought to write in this thread. But it is how it is...
I have four little kids and my hearing is wrecked. For them I want to survive. So desperate. God help me.
Tinnitus since many years, always manageable. I've been on Paroxetine for many years. This summer I tried to taper off of it. I experienced withdrawal symptoms. Tinnitus went up. So I went back on the medication. Tinnitus went up again. Now it's a reactive hiss, with crickets, and a low hum on the other side. I have four small kids and can't be around them anymore because it sends my ears through the roof.Sorry to see you in this thread. What is your story and your struggle?
All I can tell you is I'm in the same boat. I don't stay on this plane of existence for my sake but for theirs'. Always remember what you'd do to your kids if you depart. For me it is the thing that keeps me here. I can be in a state of torture, not be able in interact much with my family, my kids may grow up to thinking I am distant and unemotional and no fun, but it is far better than having to learn to live with a paternal suicide.Tinnitus since many years, always manageable. I've been on Paroxetine for many years. This summer I tried to taper off of it. I experienced withdrawal symptoms. Tinnitus went up. So I went back on the medication. Tinnitus went up again. Now it's a reactive hiss, with crickets, and a low hum on the other side. I have four small kids and can't be around them anymore because it sends my ears through the roof.
I have some days which are quieter, I regain hope, only to be beaten down the next day. I'm in my room staring at the ceiling listening to crickets, popping a Xanax (might have a dependency, took it every 3-4 days in the last 3 months). So screaming tinnitus, Paroxetine, Xanax, no life left. My wife tries to understand but it's difficult. I don't know what to do. Within 3 months I went from a life with family to this thread.
Lorazepam/Ativan seems to be a common one. Around where I am anyway. My doctor prescribed me some and continues to do so, but the lowest dose and only 10 at a time.What medications are similar to Xanax that people take? I'm curious because I'm all the time being electrocuted as my muscles constantly vibrate from a spinal cord injury and partial paralysis. It's like having a TENS machine connected all over your body.
10 at a time I'd guess would be a waste of time, as I go to the doctor once every 6 months to get prescription refills.Lorazepam/Ativan seems to be a common one. Around where I am anyway. My doctor prescribed me some and continues to do so, but the lowest dose and only 10 at a time.
Thanks for your reply. From what I read, I thought you were doing better. Do you also have the loud reactive kind of tinnitus? How old are your kids? Is your wife supportive?All I can tell you is I'm in the same boat. I don't stay on this plane of existence for my sake but for theirs'. Always remember what you'd do to your kids if you depart. For me it is the thing that keeps me here. I can be in a state of torture, not be able in interact much with my family, my kids may grow up to thinking I am distant and unemotional and no fun, but it is far better than having to learn to live with a paternal suicide.
I manage, I work, I socialize, I don't isolate or live in fear, but mostly it is not a fun way to live, every day is a challenge. My kid is a teen, my wife is very supportive, but obviously it is a stressor for our marriage and lives.Thanks for your reply. From what I read, I thought you were doing better. Do you also have the loud reactive kind of tinnitus? How old are your kids? Is your wife supportive?
Same with my GP. During a bad time years ago I was prescribed seven 2 mg Diazepam pills and that was it.Lorazepam/Ativan seems to be a common one. Around where I am anyway. My doctor prescribed me some and continues to do so, but the lowest dose and only 10 at a time.
I feel you there.Tinnitus since many years, always manageable. I've been on Paroxetine for many years. This summer I tried to taper off of it. I experienced withdrawal symptoms. Tinnitus went up. So I went back on the medication. Tinnitus went up again. Now it's a reactive hiss, with crickets, and a low hum on the other side. I have four small kids and can't be around them anymore because it sends my ears through the roof.
I have some days which are quieter, I regain hope, only to be beaten down the next day. I'm in my room staring at the ceiling listening to crickets, popping a Xanax (might have a dependency, took it every 3-4 days in the last 3 months). So screaming tinnitus, Paroxetine, Xanax, no life left. My wife tries to understand but it's difficult. I don't know what to do. Within 3 months I went from a life with family to this thread.
How do you work and manage? I'm at my wits' end. How is this possible? How long did it take you?I manage, I work, I socialize, I don't isolate or live in fear, but mostly it is not a fun way to live, every day is a challenge. My kid is a teen, my wife is very supportive, but obviously it is a stressor for our marriage and lives.
I don't know, I guess it is reactive, in that it changes in response to sounds, but it also changes in response to nothing. Loud, intrusive, unmask able, piercing, fluctuating, multi-tone, changing over the day with the base tone not entirely unlike getting a tooth drilled.
@AnthonyMcDonald, how did you manage to get 15 tones down to 3?I know how difficult and limited your life is, I know exactly what you are going through. But it's not the end. I have/had catastrophic >60 dB multiple tones, reactive, permanently spiking from <40 dB (now it's only from significant noise events or artificial noise - avoid this like the plague) tinnitus and catastrophic hyperacusis that has thankfully improved to the point where I can talk again and I have 2-3 tones instead of 15-20. I used to spike permanently from chewing or drinking water, and I couldn't even listen to a q-tip drop on the floor.
I certainly don't go out very often anymore, but it's not the end of the world. I suffered thorough insanely horrendous permanent increases of tones and volume of tinnitus for over a year before I managed to find a quiet place to stay in for months and months and wait for improvement.
Your tinnitus hasn't been with you for very long at all. Give yourself time. Time is very important. I guarantee you will stabilize eventually and be able to lead a more or less adequate life. No concerts or loud places or course.
I can say that, at the moment, I really do enjoy life, even though I spike permanently from some noise that isn't even considered loud. Let your family know how important a quiet environment is for you and give yourself time. You will eventually start enjoying life again. Be strong and give yourself time. Cheers.
I can't really notice a turning point. I guess it was very gradual.@AnthonyMcDonald, how did you manage to get 15 tones down to 3?
Did it all just happen slowly, tone by tone, after your move to the US and quieter living?
I know how bad things have been for you @Theezy - hang in there!The fact that a suicidal thread is one of the most popular on this site is awful. We have accomplished so much with modern medicine yet a condition that can manifest as constant torture and agony has such an incredible lack of understanding let alone treatment options. I think part of the problem is "tinnitus" patients are all grouped together. From someone who is not bothered by mild stable tinnitus only heard in a quiet room to someone who is housebound with tinnitus that screams in a dozen different alien frequencies along with hyperacusis and facial pain that reacts to any sound above a whisper. I have lived both ends of the spectrum as I started out mild for years, and I am now severe. The experience of my initial mild tinnitus is not in anyway comparable to what I have experienced for the last 5 months.
I have slowly become housebound due to my tinnitus increasing at less and less sound. The majority of days I experience noxacusis (burning facial pain). I have unavoidable increases in baseline tinnitus sounds/loudness a couple times a week now. Crinkling bags make me feel like my head is exploding. I have kept quiet hobbies such as drawing, setting up an aquarium, chess, cooking, and watching shows quietly. No matter what, and despite sparse days where I feel hope, it all continues to get worse. I have quite seriously worsened (incremental baseline increase or additional sounds) dozens of times over the past 5 months. I promise you it's taken more strength than I ever had to even make it the first month let alone 4 more of increasing intensity. Now I'm so far in and increases happen so easily, it truly feels like a blackhole.
I fucking love my family, I love my friends, I love my life, I love skiing, I love fly-fishing, I love rock climbing, I love backpacking, I love going on vacation with friends, I love going to weddings, I love going out to new restaurants and bars and good conversation, I love talking on the phone with friends for hours, I love so much in this world man! As of right now, I have no more tears. I'm angry as hell that this condition that I dealt with for so long has slowly and now quickly taken everything from me. I turned 29 on Wednesday. I had a beautiful night with my parents and grandma. The next day I made sushi with my incredible friends who came to *quietly* celebrate my birthday. I fucking love this life so much, but the unrelenting progression of everything beyond a point of unbearable agony makes me truly wonder if this was my last.
This message means a lot, and I know you're struggling too. I'm impressed you've reviewed so many cases - that's a scientific mind! The evidence does suggest that many do get better over a long time. I feel the need to vent here because I feel so beaten down. It's been 6 months since the worsening and since then mine has trended so far in the wrong direction regardless of what I do, it doesn't make any sense to me. I start feeling some relief and then have another setback to start everything over from an even worse baseline. It's become relentless.I know how bad things have been for you @Theezy - hang in there!
I am going through the same, am also catastrophic and bedbound now and have same thoughts as you.
I have been submerging myself in to success stories section recently as for some kind of hope. And I am very much a stats guy. I thought so many were simply habituation stories (habituation is good if it can be achieved as we both know but much more challenging for severe cases) but I was more surprised that 70% of more than 200 cases I have been through so far said their tinnitus decreased in volume from onset to time of success story, or went away in full. Not just habituation, but actual tinnitus volume reduction.
It's more possible than I think, in our negative mindset, believe it to be possible, even if not guaranteed.
I know some of these cases may have had it mild, but there were some that also had it really rough and tough before stabilising and then slowly to reduction. A number of people said their tinnitus reduced as external sound was introduced, but I know personally how risky that sounds to sufferers like us, hence I've been avoiding it too.
Some of the noise induced cases in these stats had hyperacusis too.
For noise trauma cases, like yours, the average time of onset to a reduction in tinnitus allowing a life at least semi-livable was 14 months - and for the majority the first 6-8 months were the toughest and roughest.
It may also be worth noting that 20% of the noise induced cases I've read had it go away completely, and this took an average of 18 months.
These are real cases from real people, some of who made hundreds of posts on Tinnitus Talk and were a regular part of the community before we joined.
I feel like the decision that sent me down this nightmare path has taken me on a route through damn Mordor. It looks a tough long journey ahead and it would be so easy to give up, but if I can wait out that time - get through dark Mordor - and make it back to the Shire, I may be battered, bruised, beat-up and exhausted - but if it's possible, how sweet it would be to actually enjoy a long forgotten passion again, and finally... half a smile once again.
Each day you get through, and wake the next morning, is potentially a day closer.
Glad to see you're hanging on.This message means a lot, and I know you're struggling too. I'm impressed you've reviewed so many cases - that's a scientific mind! The evidence does suggest that many do get better over a long time. I feel the need to vent here because I feel so beaten down. It's been 6 months since the worsening and since then mine has trended so far in the wrong direction regardless of what I do, it doesn't make any sense to me. I start feeling some relief and then have another setback to start everything over from an even worse baseline. It's become relentless.
I will hang on and I'm still exhausting all therapies, objectively I just don't know how much more my neural system can take and the trend has grown quite strong. I promise you I will continue to push myself far, far beyond my breaking points, as I have no other choice and I love my family and friends