Hello!
It's nice to see you all again!
As January 2018 rolls around, this will mark the 2nd year of me having tinnitus. However, even after all this time, I am not sure where it came from, and I would like some opinions!
I'll explain.
My T first started one night after I took a shower. I brushed my hair, got all cozy to sleep, and noticed a sharp, extremely sudden ringing in my left ear. This was unusual and I was a bit scared, because for a bit I had listened to some music after the shower, but I figured it might have something to do with the fact I got a very bad middle ear infection in that one as a tween and my ears have always had trouble draining.
In the days that followed, I became sick. It started with a sore throat and sinus pressure, but soon expanded into severe anxiety attacks, extreme loss of appetite (I barely ate anything for 2 weeks), mild vertigo and dizzy spells upon standing up. The ringing slowly progressed from the left ear to both for unexplained reasons. In my left ear, after laying down, I would notice this kind of bubbling pressure inside that would move downwards, slowly, the longer I sat. Like, you could physically feel it. Originally, after researching tinnitus, I blamed myself. Granted, I had truly had no extreme noise exposure that day, or that week, or that month, much less that night. I have also generally been kind to my ears. Despite being 18, unlike some of my peers I was never a fan of blasting ear-grating music throughout all hours of the day. I do indeed like music, but when I listen to it it's usually only a bit louder than people chattering in a room. The only time I turn it up a little more is when I walk home from school (no more than 10 minutes to get there) as I live in a slightly more urban area. However, cars can still be heard over the music. I rarely go to concerts. I do not use heavy machinery or guns.
When I finally ponied up and went to a good ENT (this was a particularly respected branch, they tested up to 16,000 HZ for me), they found no signs of high-frequency, mid or low hearing loss and diagnosed me with labyrinthitis, which explained both the nausea/lack of appetite, the dizziness, the changes in hearing and the anxiety. I had hoped it wasn't hearing loss, as I had had my yearly hearing physical for school the previous month and had no issue even with higher frequencies. He said what had probably happened was that my respiratory infection had spread to my inner ear, most likely because the middle ear infection I had when I was younger had weakened the membrane within the throat/ear-tube thingy. He assured me that it almost definitely wasn't my fault, and put me on some steroids to try and fight the infection. After taking them, the dizziness calmed down, and the tinnitus decreased to what it is presently. It is nearly undetectable except for in my room sometimes (it's quiet upstairs). As well, it is EXTREMELY high frequency! I can't even tone match it to 18000 HZ on a pure tone test. It sounds somewhere like 19000+ maybe. As such, it's too high to mask in all honesty. On this subject, I have done a pure tone sweep several times, and can hear well into the 19000s relatively easily. 20000 can be heard, with a little straining (slightly higher db), but it's more like a feeling at that point because of how high it is. In fact for Physiology in school only about a week or so after the T started, we did a pure tone sweep to test the class' hearing and I was the only one able to hear the 20,000 hz.
NOTES ABOUT MY T:
-Not affected by caffeine levels.
-Not affected by what little alcohol I've had, being 18
-Not affected by loud noises.
-Not affected by quality of sleep.
-Increases slightly with stress.
-The only thing that really affects the sound is when I am on my period. I believe this is hormone-related somehow.
-Actually sounds better if I push my jaw out
-Causes me very little sleeping issues, I have never used masking to sleep because of how high it is but it is a little annoying.
-Sometimes, if things get a little louder than normal (i.e when I go to a musical sometimes, and they start belting) there's a bitch of screeching that sounds like it's coming from inside my brain. It doesn't match my T noise and I don't have any loss in the range it IS in so I dont know what up with that.
-Never was and never has been a pure tone. Just a very light, soft rainstick/tv static noise
-I do have jaw issues, I clench in my sleep but have since gotten a bite guard for this
However, I've read so many discouraging posts about how Tinnitus is nearly always hearing damage related, and I'm starting to feel once again despite it coinciding with my illness that it was my fault again for maybe going a little too loud or something. Should I trust the diagnosis of labyrinthitis? If it has gotten a little better over time, and I do not have much damage (if it all????) do you suspect it may go away in time someday despite it lasting this long? My ENT told me it should, but that labyrinthitis is a complex issue and it "goes when it wants to go".
Any info helps, and sorry for my ramble!
It's nice to see you all again!
As January 2018 rolls around, this will mark the 2nd year of me having tinnitus. However, even after all this time, I am not sure where it came from, and I would like some opinions!
I'll explain.
My T first started one night after I took a shower. I brushed my hair, got all cozy to sleep, and noticed a sharp, extremely sudden ringing in my left ear. This was unusual and I was a bit scared, because for a bit I had listened to some music after the shower, but I figured it might have something to do with the fact I got a very bad middle ear infection in that one as a tween and my ears have always had trouble draining.
In the days that followed, I became sick. It started with a sore throat and sinus pressure, but soon expanded into severe anxiety attacks, extreme loss of appetite (I barely ate anything for 2 weeks), mild vertigo and dizzy spells upon standing up. The ringing slowly progressed from the left ear to both for unexplained reasons. In my left ear, after laying down, I would notice this kind of bubbling pressure inside that would move downwards, slowly, the longer I sat. Like, you could physically feel it. Originally, after researching tinnitus, I blamed myself. Granted, I had truly had no extreme noise exposure that day, or that week, or that month, much less that night. I have also generally been kind to my ears. Despite being 18, unlike some of my peers I was never a fan of blasting ear-grating music throughout all hours of the day. I do indeed like music, but when I listen to it it's usually only a bit louder than people chattering in a room. The only time I turn it up a little more is when I walk home from school (no more than 10 minutes to get there) as I live in a slightly more urban area. However, cars can still be heard over the music. I rarely go to concerts. I do not use heavy machinery or guns.
When I finally ponied up and went to a good ENT (this was a particularly respected branch, they tested up to 16,000 HZ for me), they found no signs of high-frequency, mid or low hearing loss and diagnosed me with labyrinthitis, which explained both the nausea/lack of appetite, the dizziness, the changes in hearing and the anxiety. I had hoped it wasn't hearing loss, as I had had my yearly hearing physical for school the previous month and had no issue even with higher frequencies. He said what had probably happened was that my respiratory infection had spread to my inner ear, most likely because the middle ear infection I had when I was younger had weakened the membrane within the throat/ear-tube thingy. He assured me that it almost definitely wasn't my fault, and put me on some steroids to try and fight the infection. After taking them, the dizziness calmed down, and the tinnitus decreased to what it is presently. It is nearly undetectable except for in my room sometimes (it's quiet upstairs). As well, it is EXTREMELY high frequency! I can't even tone match it to 18000 HZ on a pure tone test. It sounds somewhere like 19000+ maybe. As such, it's too high to mask in all honesty. On this subject, I have done a pure tone sweep several times, and can hear well into the 19000s relatively easily. 20000 can be heard, with a little straining (slightly higher db), but it's more like a feeling at that point because of how high it is. In fact for Physiology in school only about a week or so after the T started, we did a pure tone sweep to test the class' hearing and I was the only one able to hear the 20,000 hz.
NOTES ABOUT MY T:
-Not affected by caffeine levels.
-Not affected by what little alcohol I've had, being 18
-Not affected by loud noises.
-Not affected by quality of sleep.
-Increases slightly with stress.
-The only thing that really affects the sound is when I am on my period. I believe this is hormone-related somehow.
-Actually sounds better if I push my jaw out
-Causes me very little sleeping issues, I have never used masking to sleep because of how high it is but it is a little annoying.
-Sometimes, if things get a little louder than normal (i.e when I go to a musical sometimes, and they start belting) there's a bitch of screeching that sounds like it's coming from inside my brain. It doesn't match my T noise and I don't have any loss in the range it IS in so I dont know what up with that.
-Never was and never has been a pure tone. Just a very light, soft rainstick/tv static noise
-I do have jaw issues, I clench in my sleep but have since gotten a bite guard for this
However, I've read so many discouraging posts about how Tinnitus is nearly always hearing damage related, and I'm starting to feel once again despite it coinciding with my illness that it was my fault again for maybe going a little too loud or something. Should I trust the diagnosis of labyrinthitis? If it has gotten a little better over time, and I do not have much damage (if it all????) do you suspect it may go away in time someday despite it lasting this long? My ENT told me it should, but that labyrinthitis is a complex issue and it "goes when it wants to go".
Any info helps, and sorry for my ramble!
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