HI
@withintention.
The advice I am about to give to you is not absolute and I ask that you use it for guidance only.
In order to answer your question and give you my best advice in going forward, I perused some of your previous posts in order to determine the type of tinnitus you have and how long you have been affected by it. On your profile it states tinnitus since 10/2023, but I note from your posts, you have been managing tinnitus for quite a few years, albeit at a lower level which was caused by attending loud concerts.
I understand the way that you feel at the moment. Coupled with the fact that you have been given hearing aids with white noise, that has been tuned by your audiologist to mask your tinnitus can cause some confusion, as you are not sure the correct way to use them as part of TRT which is the treatment you seek.
You have also tried HBOT and are now looking into trying LLLT (low-level laser treatment) for tinnitus.
I think you have too many irons in the fire and need to slow things right down. Recovering from noise-induced tinnitus, which is what I believe you have, takes time and cannot be rushed. So it's important to stick to one treatment for tinnitus instead of trying multiple therapies.
Although an ear infection can cause tinnitus as mentioned on your profile, it usually goes away once the infection has been treated. Since you have had manageable tinnitus for quite some time, it is my belief continued exposure to loud noise has made your tinnitus more noticeable, to the point it is now interfering with the quality of your life.
Your Oticon hearing aids with white noise might be the type I also use. However, I do not have hearing loss, so my audiologist disabled the hearing aids via computer when I was being fitted with them. My hearing aids operate purely as white noise generators. I can select three different sounds which were adjusted to my needs. I can select white or pink noise and sea waves. The hearing aid part of your hearing aids may also be switched off to make them operate purely as sound generators.
Tinnitus should not be masked, the white noise should always be kept slightly lower than the tinnitus. If the tinnitus cannot be heard, then the brain will find it very difficult to habituate to it. White noise needs to be introduced to the ear and auditory system slowly which I have covered in my posts on this thread.
I have also covered the correct way to use white noise generators in my TRT posts which you will find on my started threads. I believe your audiologist is just that, an audiologist, and also dispenses and adjusts hearing aids with or without white noise generators, for patients and those affected with tinnitus. However, she is not a TRT therapist which is the reason she was focused purely on selling you the hearing aids with white noise generators.
I was last seen in clinic by two audiologists. One was born with tinnitus and treats tinnitus patients with TRT and CBT, the other doesn't. She told me she knows nothing about tinnitus, having never experienced it.
Most but not all audiologists that treat tinnitus patients with TRT or CBT, were either born with tinnitus or acquired it at some time in their life. Tinnitus cannot be learnt from a book or at medical school in any great depth. To give high quality counselling, which is an essential part of TRT/CBT, one must understand how tinnitus can affect a person's mental and emotional well-being and their quality of life. In my opinion, this knowledge can only be acquired if the therapist has experience living with tinnitus, preferably having experience of it being mild, moderate and severe.
Since you are new to tinnitus, by this I mean it has become more noticeable, I think you will benefit from reading the following posts on my started threads: New to Tinnitus, What to Do? The Habituation Process, How to Habituate to Tinnitus, Tinnitus and the Negative Mindset, Acquiring a Positive Mindset, Hyperacusis, As I See It.
I wish you well,
Michael