- May 8, 2016
- 320
- Tinnitus Since
- 4/2/2016
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Idiopathic hearing loss
Is there difference in habituation between tinnitus with hearing loss and tinnitus without hearing loss? Can anyone reply ?
Since getting hearing aids I feel that my tinnitus is getting worse. I notice it a lot more. I used to go most of the morning just noticing it once or twice. Now it seems to always be loud and nagging. Trying to get used to it but it's not easy.
Since getting hearing aids I feel that my tinnitus is getting worse. I notice it a lot more. I used to go most of the morning just noticing it once or twice. Now it seems to always be loud and nagging. Trying to get used to it but it's not easy.
Hi, I have hearing aids and experienced the same effect when I first started wearing the devices. Mine was that they weren't adjusted properly. However, I recall you saying how well the aids worked in reation to hearing - the doctor may have increased the amplification too much. Just a thought - God BlessSince getting hearing aids I feel that my tinnitus is getting worse. I notice it a lot more. I used to go most of the morning just noticing it once or twice. Now it seems to always be loud and nagging. Trying to get used to it but it's not easy.
Hi, I have hearing aids and experienced the same effect when I first started wearing the devices. Mine was that they weren't adjusted properly. However, I recall you saying how well the aids worked in reation to hearing - the doctor may have increased the amplification too much. Just a thought - God Bless
PS I've been using q-tips to take any ear wax off of the hearing aids, is that how people normally clean them?
I think T without hearing loss is usually milder and less noticeable because it's easier to hear ambient sounds.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18317787
According to the study people with T and without hearing loss are much better off. Masking levels are much lower for those without hearing loss.
Yes, me too, I have reactive tinnitus, and distorted hearing through my ear. The hearing aid just makes hearing distortion louder, and T worse.Since getting hearing aids I feel that my tinnitus is getting worse. I notice it a lot more. I used to go most of the morning just noticing it once or twice. Now it seems to always be loud and nagging. Trying to get used to it but it's not easy.
Yes, me too, I have reactive tinnitus, and distorted hearing through my ear. The hearing aid just makes hearing distortion louder, and T worse.
I beg to differ. I have no (detectable) hearing loss yet I cannot mask my tinnitus. My tinnitus matching levels (DBSL) were pretty high too. Masking and matching levels are kind of meaningless unless you determine the sensory level first.
If a person has a 30 db sensory level on their audiogram and they match their tinnitus to a 40db tone, it's still quieter than a person that has a 0 db sensory level that matches their tinnitus to a 30db tone.
This is a bit confusing to me. What you see on your audiogram is usually called a threshold.
The sensory level (in dB) is the perceived sound level AFTER the threshold has been subtracted, because that's exactly that: it's what you perceive (you don't perceive any sound up to your threshold - by definition).
In other words, if you have a hearing loss of 40 dB at your T frequency, and the audiologist cranks up the volume on the T matching sound, you will not hear anything until s/he crosses the 40 dB bar.
At that point you start hearing and determine what "matches" your T volume. If the audiologist keeps cranking up to 60 dB and you say "that's it", then the dB SL measured is 20 dB, because that's what you perceive, given your 40 dB loss.
See here.
That's insane that someone can get tinnitus with perfect hearing and not be able mask it. Did you happen to check and see if each ear can hear tones like 50hz and 10khz at low volumes?
[USER=17872 said:@Kendall[/USER] If you don't mind me asking, how old are you? I'm 27 and work as a nurse in a hospital. I've picked the brains of a few of the general medicine doctors here and they all say I'm too young to have hearing loss - I kind of agree. I would say that my loud noise exposure would be less than the average person. As mentioned, my work environment isn't particularly loud. I used to blast my music as a teenager, and maybe too much in my car when I was 20, 21 but I feel like it's still not the cause of my hearing loss/ tinnitus. The main reason I say that is because the hearing loss is bilateral and equal. I feel like if it was damage from loud noise exposure, it would be more prominent on one side.
Yes, I know I've had it done a number of times. Maybe I didn't phrase that well. What I meant to say is it's pretty obvious why someone with hearing loss would require a higher masking volume if it's not being adjusted for sensory level.
Now if you adjusted that masking volume to their sensory level would it be that much different?
Age has nothing to do with it. I'm 30 and have huge hearing loss at 4kHz and above.I've picked the brains of a few of the general medicine doctors here and they all say I'm too young to have hearing loss - I kind of agree.
Age has nothing to do with it. I'm 30 and have huge hearing loss at 4kHz and above.
Alue,Age related hearing loss and noise related hearing loss typically have different patterns.