@Mau Rice (and All) -
Please allow me to clarify a bit regarding what I mean about "anecdotal reports" as opposed to "good data."
The back story ...
Twenty-five years ago I myself developed severe intrusive tinnitus after three days on nabumetone (Relafen). I had never experienced tinnitus prior to that time, and I attributed it all to the nabumetone. My tinnitus has not changed since its onset. It is still the same cross between a screaming teakettle and a roaring jet turbine 24/7 that it was early on, when it pretty-much put me in bed for the better part of a year. And it was all because of the nabumetone. Or better stated, it was
apparently all because of the nabumetone.
You see, for years I attributed my tinnitus to the nabumetone. But in retrospect it might not have been the nabumetone at all. As it turns out, back around the time of the onset of my tinnitus I was a marathon runner (many beers and pizzas ago), and to kill the boredom during my longer practice runs, I used to wear a Sony Walkman (google it!) around my waist and blast the music through headphones. So it may well be that my tinnitus was due entirely to noise ototoxicity - and the fact that I was on nabumetone may have been purely coincidental.
Anyway, working with tinnitus patients in my clinic and helping my colleagues with their own patients, my ears always perked up (no pun intended) when I heard of those who had been on nabumetone when their tinnitus began. There were a total of four or five patients over the past quarter century as best I can recall. But if you think about it, I was looking at a highly skewed population. I was ignoring the enormous number of folks who never developed tinnitus on nabumetone. Moreover, I was discounting any other factors that may have been at play (like my marathon-running).
So that is the difference between anecdotal reports and good data.
Where things stand now ...
No matter how hard I try, I cannot seem to get past the fact that I had started nabumetone three days prior to the onset of a condition that changed the course of my entire life, and I cannot seem to get past the fact that I am aware of a handful of other folks for whom the same holds true. So what I do with that sort of information, which might possibly be of value, but which on the other hand might be completely misleading? The best I can do appears in the final paragraph in my article on "Drugs To Avoid."
Hope this helps.
Stephen M. Nagler, M.D.