- Mar 1, 2020
- 2
- Tinnitus Since
- 2/22/2020
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Loud concert with concussion
Hi Dr. Nagler,
I suffered from a concussion on 2/20/2020. I did not experience any ringing in my ears after that, but had other concussion symptoms. I then made the ill-advised decision to go to a friend's concert on 2/22/2020. The concert was extremely loud and I ended up directly in front of a speaker for a little over an hour. After the concert, I could barely hear and the roaring sound in my head was unbearable.
Despite the ringing in my ears and headache, I went to fitness classes the next day (more loud environments). These certainly did not help, but also did not seem to improve the ringing. The ringing seemed to have improved a bit by 2/24/2020. On that day, I helped some friends with a renovation project and built a door frame, requiring about two hours of sawing and nail hammering. The pounding in my head was the worst that night.
This last week, I went to two GPs and an ENT. The GPs assured me that the ringing would stop, but I was having too much anxiety about it to wait to see a specialist. The ENT told me that it would "most likely" go away, and probably within 6 weeks. She told me to just live my normal life and avoid exposure to unnecessarily loud noises (concerts, sporting events, etc.).
I am training to become a fitness instructor and I attend at least one class everyday. The classes are typically quite loud (think SoulCycle). I asked her if I could continue attending these classes, and she said yes, as long as I had hearing protection. I have attended one 2/28 and one on 2/29, with ear protection for both. It did not make the tinnitus extremely worse, but the ringing is louder as a result.
My questions are:
1) Is this ringing permanent?
2) If it is significantly quieter than one week ago, does that mean that it is going away?
3) Can I continue to take fitness classes or am I making the possibility of its permanence worse?
4) If the tinnitus does eventually completely go away, will it come back every time I am in a loud environment?
Thank you so much for you time. The anxiety caused by this is unbelievable.
Sincerely,
Erin
I suffered from a concussion on 2/20/2020. I did not experience any ringing in my ears after that, but had other concussion symptoms. I then made the ill-advised decision to go to a friend's concert on 2/22/2020. The concert was extremely loud and I ended up directly in front of a speaker for a little over an hour. After the concert, I could barely hear and the roaring sound in my head was unbearable.
Despite the ringing in my ears and headache, I went to fitness classes the next day (more loud environments). These certainly did not help, but also did not seem to improve the ringing. The ringing seemed to have improved a bit by 2/24/2020. On that day, I helped some friends with a renovation project and built a door frame, requiring about two hours of sawing and nail hammering. The pounding in my head was the worst that night.
This last week, I went to two GPs and an ENT. The GPs assured me that the ringing would stop, but I was having too much anxiety about it to wait to see a specialist. The ENT told me that it would "most likely" go away, and probably within 6 weeks. She told me to just live my normal life and avoid exposure to unnecessarily loud noises (concerts, sporting events, etc.).
I am training to become a fitness instructor and I attend at least one class everyday. The classes are typically quite loud (think SoulCycle). I asked her if I could continue attending these classes, and she said yes, as long as I had hearing protection. I have attended one 2/28 and one on 2/29, with ear protection for both. It did not make the tinnitus extremely worse, but the ringing is louder as a result.
My questions are:
1) Is this ringing permanent?
2) If it is significantly quieter than one week ago, does that mean that it is going away?
3) Can I continue to take fitness classes or am I making the possibility of its permanence worse?
4) If the tinnitus does eventually completely go away, will it come back every time I am in a loud environment?
Thank you so much for you time. The anxiety caused by this is unbelievable.
Sincerely,
Erin