So, last Wednesday I was sitting in church listening to the sermon, and I had a spike in my tinnitus in my right ear. This is normal, I have spikes every so often that last a few seconds. And this one, like the usually, only lasted a few seconds. But, after I started to develop this whistle that is reactive; as sounds go up I can here the whistle with it. It's like it adds a "whistley" sound to almost all sounds.
When I have a spike that is out of the ordinary I take prednisone, which is an anti-inflammatory drug. I took it when I first got tinnitus, because mine was due to SSHL ( sudden sensorineural hearing loss). Which I believed helped, because the tinnitus was defiantly worse at first.
Anyways, I just really need some help; I almost never trouble sleeping because of my tinnitus, but last night was hard. And, I have been pretty good with the tinnitus for sometime. I was feeling good about it not but just a week ago.
Questions
When I have a spike that is out of the ordinary I take prednisone, which is an anti-inflammatory drug. I took it when I first got tinnitus, because mine was due to SSHL ( sudden sensorineural hearing loss). Which I believed helped, because the tinnitus was defiantly worse at first.
Anyways, I just really need some help; I almost never trouble sleeping because of my tinnitus, but last night was hard. And, I have been pretty good with the tinnitus for sometime. I was feeling good about it not but just a week ago.
Questions
- I know that prednisone is ototoxic to some degree. Should I continue to take it? Since it has helped in the past. As well, how long is it okay to take it? Please share some experience if you can.
- Is there something more I could be doing to help get better?
- How long do spikes typically last? Are they permanent? Do they get better?
- Is this drug FX-322 look more promising then any other drug you guys have seen? I am relatively new to tinnitus, I have only had it around 8 months so I don't really know a lot.
- How long do you think it might take for there to be a cure? Or, at least something that could help alleviate this?