Alright, so I developed hyperacusis immediately after my head on collision on June 19th of this year. Ton of jaw/ear/cheekbone pain. The tinnitus came the next month when I fell asleep on the affected ear.
Personally, I'd rather have the tinnitus gone because I prefer isolation. However, the gym is a very important part of who I am and after a four month layoff I was cleared to lift.
I have misophonia now too (my dad breathing heavily from COPD, chewing sounds are annoying.
Now, the point of the matter: my ear/jaw spasms/pain are both set off by loud, unexpected sounds—mostly from the gym but can also be from nebulous sources like doors shutting (even the microwave). The nerves flare up and it worsens my tinnitus. It feels like something is contracting inside my ear, but it's not rhythmic or anything—it's just pulling tight, and all of the muscles and nerves around it contract/flare up.
Is this textbook hyperacusis, or am I going into more specific territory like Tensor Tympani Syndrome?
Personally, I'd rather have the tinnitus gone because I prefer isolation. However, the gym is a very important part of who I am and after a four month layoff I was cleared to lift.
I have misophonia now too (my dad breathing heavily from COPD, chewing sounds are annoying.
Now, the point of the matter: my ear/jaw spasms/pain are both set off by loud, unexpected sounds—mostly from the gym but can also be from nebulous sources like doors shutting (even the microwave). The nerves flare up and it worsens my tinnitus. It feels like something is contracting inside my ear, but it's not rhythmic or anything—it's just pulling tight, and all of the muscles and nerves around it contract/flare up.
Is this textbook hyperacusis, or am I going into more specific territory like Tensor Tympani Syndrome?