Tinnitus After Acoustic Trauma — I'm New with Questions — Please Help!

Jen67

Member
Author
Jan 19, 2018
18
Tinnitus Since
11/17
Cause of Tinnitus
acoustic trauma
Hi all, I would love to pick your collective brains on a few things. Thanks in advance!

I suffered an acoustic trauma about 2 months ago (Nov. 10) when exposed very briefly to super-high volume on small headphones (the old kind, not earbuds). My ears hurt afterward, but were better by the next day when I had to go practice with a 20-piece recorder orchestra. (It was in preparing for that practice that I had the trauma—surely one of the more ludicrous cases of a random tinnitus-causing event!)

For the next two weeks they were also fine, so much so that I mostly forgot about the whole thing. I practiced music a lot the first week, then traveled the second. When we returned home (two weeks after initial trauma) I noticed it sounded very loud when my son and I tried to practice recorder. At first I just experienced this hyperacusis and ear pain, then tinnitus set in several days later (i.e., about two and a half weeks post-trauma).

Since then it's been up and down. At worst, high pitched or pulsatile tinnitus (not too loud, but still very annoying, esp. for sleep); at best, just hiss or whooshing. Most strikingly, I went to noisy New York City (my hometown) for two weeks over Dec. holidays, expecting the worst, but was mostly fine the whole time. This seems to be why: I am not (or so far have not been) that bothered by things like loud talking in restaurants or street noise, but I *am* surprisingly bothered by proximate things like the TV or (not that loud) music at home, whether from the stereo or my son practicing piano. Usually these things don't bother me at the time, but then they make the tinnitus worse afterwards. Unfortunately they (TV news, music being practiced) are a big part of daily life in our otherwise very quiet house. I have been mostly wearing earplugs (the foam bell-shaped kind) when these noises are around, but sometimes it seems that wearing the plugs more than once a day for any lengthy period makes the T worse afterward also. Or is it perhaps just that they can't really block out enough of the sound?

I feel my T is not so bad compared to many people's. My big concern is not to make it worse, and also to promote the possibility that, since it isn't so bad, it might go away in time. I love music, and I would hate to think I would have to wear ear plugs so often forever. I've already had to quit the recorder orchestra (high pitches seem the worst)! (I should have mentioned: I saw an ENT in Dec. and eardrums are fine; there was some hearing loss—an amount he considered negligible—at high frequencies in one ear, but actually the other ear is often worse T-wise, and I wonder if that loss is really more from all my many youthful years of listening to very loud bands and wearing my Walkman on the subway. None of that ever gave me T, though.) (Oh, also, I had the flu last week and that didn't help matters. I already have sinus issues, use a Neti pot, and T seems predictably worse when ears are clogged.)

I am tempted to think it would probably be best if I really tried to be far away from TV and music in the house for at least a month or so—i.e., not in the room or nearby wearing ear plugs but off in a whole other part of the house. Especially based on my NYC experience, it seems it is these nearby loud-ish sounds that bother me sometimes most. (Unfortunately my husband, nearing 60, already needs things like TV somewhat louder—a bad combination!)

What do you all think? And also:

1) Is there any point whatsoever in taking supplements if T results from an acoustic trauma?

2) What about sleeping with or otherwise listening to white/pink noise? Does it help?

3) Is it commonplace in these situations for the symptoms to get worse during first few months, then improve? I.e., I was surprised they set in only 2 weeks later, but things I've read since then suggest this is common and that they may even peak at 3 months or so before improving. Has anyone had this experience?

4) I really only use the ear plugs at home due to our TV-news and music routines (I guess I'd use them if we went out to a movie or concert, but otherwise we live in a pretty quiet town). But I do go back and forth about how much to use them and what's best. Oh, I am also wondering if I should be using the smaller "women's" earplugs—it's true that when I use the regular size kind, they still stick out a bit even after being rolled and inserted properly. Could this make a real difference—maybe I'm not really plugging my ears completely? Or should I really avoid all TV and music even with ear plugs for awhile?

5) Finally, I am supposed to get wisdom teeth out in a week—just top ones, thankfully, which have already emerged. I could either wear earplugs/headphones for this or put it off if that seems smarter; I'm not really having pain or trouble; it's just something my dentist recommends because a gum pocket is rapidly growing there. Any thoughts?

Many, many thanks for any help you all can provide!

Jen
 
What about sleeping with or otherwise listening to white/pink noise? Does it help?
It helps to have something else besides your T to listen to. It helps a Lot. Some people even believe that this might make T to fade a little. I am not sure about that.

Is it commonplace in these situations for the symptoms to get worse during first few months, then improve? I.e., I was surprised they set in only 2 weeks later, but things I've read since then suggest this is common and that they may even peak at 3 months or so before improving. Has anyone had this experience?
I got T on day 11 after my acoustic trauma. Your T will tend to fade, provided you don't continue to injure your ears. My advice is for you to stay away (for a year or two) from even the moderate noises like that of a vacuum cleaner. Of course you will also want to listen to your body and stay away from the kind of noises that make you worse.

Some people choose to "not let T win" - they continue doing the things they enjoy doing. I believe this is a way to ensure that one's T doesn't fade.
I could either wear earplugs/headphones for this or put it off if that seems smarter; I'm not really having pain or trouble; it's just something my dentist recommends because a gum pocket is rapidly growing there. Any thoughts?
If I were you, I would postpone the procedure. Why take a risk when you don't have to. Give your body a chance to heal.
Or should I really avoid all TV and music even with ear plugs for awhile?
Try wearing earplugs, if you still get spikes, then try to avoid TV completely. Otherwise try to limit TV.
Is there any point whatsoever in taking supplements if T results from an acoustic trauma?
I think there is a chance that supplements will help you. Keep in mind that ears take forever to heal. So if you don't see any difference in the first month, don't lose hope.

Check out the thread below where I summarize everything (24 tips spread over three posts) I learned about managing tinnitus after reading the posts on this forum for the past 11 months
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/thread...itus-recently-this-info-will-be-useful.25741/
 
Thank you so much, Bill, for taking the time to write these personal responses, especially when you have already produced your other very helpful thread for everyone. I am now seriously considering putting off the dental work.

One of the most interesting things to me was how much better my T got during our two weeks in New York over the holidays. It is of course a very loud town (we took plenty of subways, and all I did was cover my ears a bit), and where I live in the midwest it is very quiet, especially at our house in the woods. In the beginning in NY, certain noises (like the dinging on the plane before flight attendant speaks) bothered me much more than at the end returning home. So what was happening there?
1) Is it in fact true that proximate noises in the home (TV, vacuum, musical instruments) can cause more problems than general street/restaurant noise, even subways? (Again, we watched almost no TV on trip, and no instruments.)
2) Or is it perhaps better for healing your T to live in a city where there is more constant ambient noise, rather than here where there is dead silence broken by these occasional noisy patches (of TV and so on)?
3) Or was I just less stressed because on vacation, and that helped most of all? (I have certainly had this experience with other chronic conditions, like ulcerative colitis.)

Any thoughts based on your experience? Many thanks again!
 
Your loved ones need to make compromises for you. It is part of being a family to take care of each other. Subtitles are a must for TV with tinnitus, imo.

If I am watching TV with others the TV WILL not hurt me or they will not be in my home for long.
 
One of the most interesting things to me was how much better my T got during our two weeks in New York over the holidays. It is of course a very loud town (we took plenty of subways, and all I did was cover my ears a bit), and where I live in the midwest it is very quiet, especially at our house in the woods. In the beginning in NY, certain noises (like the dinging on the plane before flight attendant speaks) bothered me much more than at the end returning home. So what was happening there?
If you were less stressed when you were in NY, perhaps your T Is influenced by stress, after all. My T is not like that, and so I don't know much about T that reacts to stress.
1) Is it in fact true that proximate noises in the home (TV, vacuum, musical instruments) can cause more problems than general street/restaurant noise, even subways? (Again, we watched almost no TV on trip, and no instruments.)
The types of noises that one has to watch out for change from person to person. I learned that when the sound is generated very close to my ear, it has a serious impact on my T. Try to understand what your body is trying to tell you and act accordingly...
Subtitles are a must for TV with tinnitus, imo.
Yes, you want to set the volume of your TV to the loudest volume that you can handle for many hours straight, without having your T spike. This way, you won't develop H (and you could then protect your ears without having to worry about getting H).
 

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