- Dec 1, 2019
- 1
- Tinnitus Since
- 2018
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Maybe anxiety, maybe hearing loss
Hi!
I suffer from tinnitus since June 2018. (My mother has this condition, and her father was also afflicted by it -- so there must be something genetic going on.) Tinnitus lead to my first visit to a psychiatrist, and I'm still taking drugs for anxiety. It would be hard to live without one of them: mirtazapine, an antidepressant prescribed off label for anxiety disorders. I think I recovered from severe anxiety (in June 2018 I lost 5 Kg, and barely could eat), but mirtazapine allows me to fall into sleep even when my tinnitus is at its more effervescent, distressing form. (Unfortunately, mirtazapine made me gain 20 kg, and I just started loosing some weight.)
That tinnitus causes most of my anxiety (now a manageable anxiety, but sill there) is beyond doubt. But is anxiety also the main cause of my tinnitus? I don't know! (Increased anxiety worsens my tinnitus -- I have little doubt about this.) I went to an otorhinolaryngologist (what a word!), and made a few audiometric tests. According to the tests, I have some high frequency hearing loss, and I was told that such loss was the cause of my tinnitus. I doubt this. During the tests, I was, not surprisingly, experiencing tinnitus. So how could the doctor have inferred that I couldn't ear those very high pitched sounds because I have hearing loss (and, therefore, that I have tinnitus because I have hearing loss)? Maybe I couldn't hear those damn sounds just because my auditory field was filled with tinnitus! I wish I could repeat the tests on one of the rare occasions when I'm free from tinnitus... This makes me suspect that too often tinnitus is wrongfully attributed to hearing loss.
Well, I'm still unsure about the cause or causes of my tinnitus (of a quite irregular nature, by the way)... What lessens its intensity? I found out that after being exposed to certain kinds of noise (shower, city noises...), it tends to become very tolerable. Talking on the cellphone also helps a lot, but I don't do that often. After a 30m conversation, my tinnitus nearly vanishes...
Best,
Pedro
I suffer from tinnitus since June 2018. (My mother has this condition, and her father was also afflicted by it -- so there must be something genetic going on.) Tinnitus lead to my first visit to a psychiatrist, and I'm still taking drugs for anxiety. It would be hard to live without one of them: mirtazapine, an antidepressant prescribed off label for anxiety disorders. I think I recovered from severe anxiety (in June 2018 I lost 5 Kg, and barely could eat), but mirtazapine allows me to fall into sleep even when my tinnitus is at its more effervescent, distressing form. (Unfortunately, mirtazapine made me gain 20 kg, and I just started loosing some weight.)
That tinnitus causes most of my anxiety (now a manageable anxiety, but sill there) is beyond doubt. But is anxiety also the main cause of my tinnitus? I don't know! (Increased anxiety worsens my tinnitus -- I have little doubt about this.) I went to an otorhinolaryngologist (what a word!), and made a few audiometric tests. According to the tests, I have some high frequency hearing loss, and I was told that such loss was the cause of my tinnitus. I doubt this. During the tests, I was, not surprisingly, experiencing tinnitus. So how could the doctor have inferred that I couldn't ear those very high pitched sounds because I have hearing loss (and, therefore, that I have tinnitus because I have hearing loss)? Maybe I couldn't hear those damn sounds just because my auditory field was filled with tinnitus! I wish I could repeat the tests on one of the rare occasions when I'm free from tinnitus... This makes me suspect that too often tinnitus is wrongfully attributed to hearing loss.
Well, I'm still unsure about the cause or causes of my tinnitus (of a quite irregular nature, by the way)... What lessens its intensity? I found out that after being exposed to certain kinds of noise (shower, city noises...), it tends to become very tolerable. Talking on the cellphone also helps a lot, but I don't do that often. After a 30m conversation, my tinnitus nearly vanishes...
Best,
Pedro