Hello, my tinnitus is currently at suicide levels. 10/10. It hasn't been this bad since 2013. I genuinely had a period over the summer in 2018 where it was unnoticeable without any background noise too. Now instead of lurking on this forum, I'm actually posting.
I either got it in 2012/13 or it became severely noticeable around that time. I was going through massive stress and I'm pretty sure something changed in my brain the night I didn't sleep at all before a three hour final exam. I was experiencing severe relationship abuse and trying to complete an accounting course at the same time. There were a couple more things, but I'm not going to go into those because the end result is the same. It was the first night I ever experienced insomnia that OTC sleeping tablets didn't even touch (couldn't sleep for days). I went to a private ENT and after telling him my two biggest issues were dizziness and tinnitus, he referred me to vestibular rehabilitation which is a type of targeted physiotherapy really. That was great for my balance and neck pain, but the tinnitus remained. It took me until 2015 to figure out I had impacted earwax (that the ENT didn't mention to me two years prior) and I was finally referred to an NHS ENT (I didn't have insurance anymore and the consultants on the NHS are just as good as the private ones). The wax was removed (manual and microsuction) and I was advised to attend appointments every four months. I did this robotically and it felt like the longer I kept my ears clean, the more the tinnitus appeared to be fading. Most of the time there would only be a couple of tiny bits of wax in both ears that were easily removed manually due to appointment frequency. I moved cities and ended up having to wait five months for appointments at the new hospital, but four weeks didn't make that much of a difference really. Everything was fine, even while doing a stressful university course...
But during the process of being hired for a new job from January/February to March, a new sound appeared in my right ear. It was like intermittent faded morse code that came from my ear as opposed to just my usual high-pitched continuous head sounds. Then all the COVID-19 crap started. I had to leave my job for safety reasons, I was living alone during lockdown in a terrible flat and didn't see a single person for almost two months. The morse code sound became constant and I assumed it was because of how much wax had built up (my last appointment was the first week of November 2019). Later on, I realised that I could modify the pitch of my tinnitus in my left ear by moving the ear canal upwards.
I couldn't tolerate waiting (it's been 9 months so far and "routine" services have still not resumed) so paid for a private ENT consultant to remove my earwax. It was the same doctor as I had in 2013. I am SO angry and suicidal. I'm convinced he didn't remove all of the wax like the NHS ENT consultants and nurses normally do (and show me they have) and he said that the new "morse code" tone is due to stress. I got someone to take a photo of my right ear and there's still a bit of wax on the inside near the front, indicating it wasn't cleaned that well. I have no idea what's further inside or if he even checked my eardrums! The tinnitus hasn't changed AT ALL. I'm actually furious because I paid so much to have this done as I couldn't wait, but I don't think he's done it properly. I can feel sticky stuff in my ears when I move my canals around. I've been left in tears and I don't want to go back to someone who I believe might be incompetent, leaving me on this NHS waiting list.
I'm going to Boots Hearingcare on Wednesday so they can let me know how much wax is in there. If there is still some in there, I'm going to be angry because that means the ENT hasn't done a good job, but if my canals are clear, it means it's coming from my brain and I'll probably be even angrier. I've never had this problem before on the NHS.
Seeing as it's a newer sound and I've had zero loud sound exposure and no illness prior to it starting (I've been using custom ACS Pro 27 earplugs for years anyway), what could this be? Is it really purely stress like the ENT mentioned, or could it be that he's done a crap job? I find it hard to believe that stress on its own can cause such huge changes.
I'm so anxious I feel like I'm going to be sick. I hope someone can help me. I'm going to call BTA tomorrow anyway, as well as the NHS clinic I went to before this world insanity began.
I either got it in 2012/13 or it became severely noticeable around that time. I was going through massive stress and I'm pretty sure something changed in my brain the night I didn't sleep at all before a three hour final exam. I was experiencing severe relationship abuse and trying to complete an accounting course at the same time. There were a couple more things, but I'm not going to go into those because the end result is the same. It was the first night I ever experienced insomnia that OTC sleeping tablets didn't even touch (couldn't sleep for days). I went to a private ENT and after telling him my two biggest issues were dizziness and tinnitus, he referred me to vestibular rehabilitation which is a type of targeted physiotherapy really. That was great for my balance and neck pain, but the tinnitus remained. It took me until 2015 to figure out I had impacted earwax (that the ENT didn't mention to me two years prior) and I was finally referred to an NHS ENT (I didn't have insurance anymore and the consultants on the NHS are just as good as the private ones). The wax was removed (manual and microsuction) and I was advised to attend appointments every four months. I did this robotically and it felt like the longer I kept my ears clean, the more the tinnitus appeared to be fading. Most of the time there would only be a couple of tiny bits of wax in both ears that were easily removed manually due to appointment frequency. I moved cities and ended up having to wait five months for appointments at the new hospital, but four weeks didn't make that much of a difference really. Everything was fine, even while doing a stressful university course...
But during the process of being hired for a new job from January/February to March, a new sound appeared in my right ear. It was like intermittent faded morse code that came from my ear as opposed to just my usual high-pitched continuous head sounds. Then all the COVID-19 crap started. I had to leave my job for safety reasons, I was living alone during lockdown in a terrible flat and didn't see a single person for almost two months. The morse code sound became constant and I assumed it was because of how much wax had built up (my last appointment was the first week of November 2019). Later on, I realised that I could modify the pitch of my tinnitus in my left ear by moving the ear canal upwards.
I couldn't tolerate waiting (it's been 9 months so far and "routine" services have still not resumed) so paid for a private ENT consultant to remove my earwax. It was the same doctor as I had in 2013. I am SO angry and suicidal. I'm convinced he didn't remove all of the wax like the NHS ENT consultants and nurses normally do (and show me they have) and he said that the new "morse code" tone is due to stress. I got someone to take a photo of my right ear and there's still a bit of wax on the inside near the front, indicating it wasn't cleaned that well. I have no idea what's further inside or if he even checked my eardrums! The tinnitus hasn't changed AT ALL. I'm actually furious because I paid so much to have this done as I couldn't wait, but I don't think he's done it properly. I can feel sticky stuff in my ears when I move my canals around. I've been left in tears and I don't want to go back to someone who I believe might be incompetent, leaving me on this NHS waiting list.
I'm going to Boots Hearingcare on Wednesday so they can let me know how much wax is in there. If there is still some in there, I'm going to be angry because that means the ENT hasn't done a good job, but if my canals are clear, it means it's coming from my brain and I'll probably be even angrier. I've never had this problem before on the NHS.
Seeing as it's a newer sound and I've had zero loud sound exposure and no illness prior to it starting (I've been using custom ACS Pro 27 earplugs for years anyway), what could this be? Is it really purely stress like the ENT mentioned, or could it be that he's done a crap job? I find it hard to believe that stress on its own can cause such huge changes.
I'm so anxious I feel like I'm going to be sick. I hope someone can help me. I'm going to call BTA tomorrow anyway, as well as the NHS clinic I went to before this world insanity began.