Hi all! My tinnitus started in mid-October. I'm unsure of the cause, like many. No recent loud noise exposure (unless a literal second of too-loud car radio would have been enough?). Hearing test came back with slight higher range hearing loss but overall normal ranges for my age (37). My tinnitus is more so the hissing kind, I think? I'm bad at describing the sound - to me it sounds kinda like someone pouring sand or rice. Sometimes it is in one ear, sometimes in both - moreso on my right BUT sometimes it pops over to the left just to confuse me even more! It will sometimes change ears multiple times in the span of a single day. Maybe it is pulsatile tinnitus? My ENT has put near-zero effort into actually figuring out the cause, so I'm looking for a new one, lol.
At first it only lasted for about 5 days, then faded away for a day or two. I thought 'ok phew, that was weird' but then it came back. I was also having head pressure feeling so I thought it was a sinus infection; I saw my GP, did a 5-day course of antibiotics and Sudafed. When I finished the last pill, I did something probably not smart in retrospect - hopped on a 12-hour overseas flight. A vacation my spouse and I had already been planning for a year, bought and paid for and no refunds, lol, so I was going no matter what. The ringing sucked on the flight BUT miraculously cleared up a day into our trip. Doctors have been telling me 'oh it's because you were less stressed, you were distracted!' etc but I SWEAR it actually went away. Lying in the hotel room in the dead of night, intentionally 'searching' for the sound (you know what I mean) and it was truly gone...
Of course, we came back and it came back, and it's been a nightmare ever since. I saw an ENT who thought it might be a local allergy so we tried a steroid shot. It worked GREAT for a day, but then came back. I tried acupuncture which seemed to maybe help the day after each treatment but that also didn't last. Now my ENT thinks it's from COVID-19 vaccination, which I know is possible but like... I got my 4th or 5th booster this year, so why the reaction only now? (Tinnitus is a nightmare but I guess it's better than being on a ventilator...)
I started on Amitriptyline. It really helped me at first and was a godsend during the holidays. But my body seemed to rapidly adapt to the dosages (I have an autoimmune condition and often respond this way to medicine) and I found myself needing to increase the amount every week or two. Last week, it wasn't helping anymore and out of pure desperation, I went up in amount again and unfortunately wound up in the ER. Long story short, it lowered my blood pressure, but I already have pretty low blood pressure, so the doctor said I should stop taking it all together.
After that scary episode, I'm sad that I no longer have this coping mechanism but thankful that nothing worse happened. Begrudgingly coming to accept that a pill isn't going to entirely solve my problems. I've been lurking here for a bit and finally decided to join to reframe my mindset about tinnitus and try to be more positive in my outlook and approach to it. The last few days I've been trying a lot more supplements and exploring different treatment options - this is hard as hell to deal with but I hope that means that defeating it will feel that much more rewarding.
For me, I know that stress is probably a big factor but, but the tinnitus is basically my ONLY source of stress right now! It feels very 'which came first, the chicken or the egg?' and I personally get pi**ed when doctors say "oh just stress less" like?!
At first it only lasted for about 5 days, then faded away for a day or two. I thought 'ok phew, that was weird' but then it came back. I was also having head pressure feeling so I thought it was a sinus infection; I saw my GP, did a 5-day course of antibiotics and Sudafed. When I finished the last pill, I did something probably not smart in retrospect - hopped on a 12-hour overseas flight. A vacation my spouse and I had already been planning for a year, bought and paid for and no refunds, lol, so I was going no matter what. The ringing sucked on the flight BUT miraculously cleared up a day into our trip. Doctors have been telling me 'oh it's because you were less stressed, you were distracted!' etc but I SWEAR it actually went away. Lying in the hotel room in the dead of night, intentionally 'searching' for the sound (you know what I mean) and it was truly gone...
Of course, we came back and it came back, and it's been a nightmare ever since. I saw an ENT who thought it might be a local allergy so we tried a steroid shot. It worked GREAT for a day, but then came back. I tried acupuncture which seemed to maybe help the day after each treatment but that also didn't last. Now my ENT thinks it's from COVID-19 vaccination, which I know is possible but like... I got my 4th or 5th booster this year, so why the reaction only now? (Tinnitus is a nightmare but I guess it's better than being on a ventilator...)
I started on Amitriptyline. It really helped me at first and was a godsend during the holidays. But my body seemed to rapidly adapt to the dosages (I have an autoimmune condition and often respond this way to medicine) and I found myself needing to increase the amount every week or two. Last week, it wasn't helping anymore and out of pure desperation, I went up in amount again and unfortunately wound up in the ER. Long story short, it lowered my blood pressure, but I already have pretty low blood pressure, so the doctor said I should stop taking it all together.
After that scary episode, I'm sad that I no longer have this coping mechanism but thankful that nothing worse happened. Begrudgingly coming to accept that a pill isn't going to entirely solve my problems. I've been lurking here for a bit and finally decided to join to reframe my mindset about tinnitus and try to be more positive in my outlook and approach to it. The last few days I've been trying a lot more supplements and exploring different treatment options - this is hard as hell to deal with but I hope that means that defeating it will feel that much more rewarding.
For me, I know that stress is probably a big factor but, but the tinnitus is basically my ONLY source of stress right now! It feels very 'which came first, the chicken or the egg?' and I personally get pi**ed when doctors say "oh just stress less" like?!