gregmech26
Member
- Dec 3, 2020
- 26
- Tinnitus Since
- May 2015
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Acoustic Neuroma vestibular schwannoma brain tumor
Sorry to hear that, did you gradually lose hearing or was it sudden like mine? How is your word recognition and pure tone thresholds at higher frequencies?Nice to read your progress. I have a similar story, except my acoustic neuroma is on the right. I wish you continued success.
I had my ears cleaned with the vacuum/suctioning device that they used.Sorry to hear that, did you gradually lose hearing or was it sudden like mine? How is your word recognition and pure tone thresholds at higher frequencies?
Very interesting to hear your story and to see similarities and differences. Mine was also well over $100k, thank God for insurance!I had my ears cleaned with the vacuum/suctioning device that they used.
A week later I came back complaining that I had a ringing in my ears. The ENT thought I wanted to sue them for malpractice and whipped out charts on how cleaning ears doesn't cause damage or ringing. At this point, I never knew or heard the word tinnitus.
I presented him with classic Acoustic Neuroma symptoms, such as having to answer the phone with my other ear, etc., but it all was to no avail. This ENT was clueless.
About 45 days later of panicking with my mom, not knowing what the heck is going on with this new ringing, a different ENT from Harvard finally prescribed an MRI.
And the rest is history.
It was sudden hearing loss which got progressively worse after the Gamma Knife procedure. Much worse 10 days after Gamma Knife.
I have the classic Acoustic Neuroma high-frequency loss bell curve on my audiogram. My word recognition isn't too bad. I miss like 3 words out of the set. I don't have the current audiogram. I'm getting a new hearing test Thursday and will update.
I flew out-of-state to get the best Gamma Knife treatment I could find. Given my deck of cards I was dealt, I think I made the best decision I could at the time. It's like getting a 16 in blackjack. Not a very good hand however you play it. The insurance paid well over $100k for the Gamma Knife when everything was all said and done.
Since I still have some usable hearing left in my right side, the best thing for me is finding a hearing aid that amplifies the natural sound around me as opposed to masking. Hopefully they will present me with new options Thursday at my audiologist appointment.
I'm hoping the new FX-322 will still be effective on hearing loss and catastrophic tinnitus caused by Acoustic Neuroma.
Thanks for the reply along with your current situation, it certainly is tough dealing with hearing loss and tinnitus. Hopefully we can ride this out until we find some sort of personal relief buddy!For being just two months post-op your progress looks very encouraging. The fluctuations are perfectly normal. Hopefully they will even out to something you can manage nicely.
I'm just over 5 years post Gamma Knife. Unfortunately, my audiogram this afternoon at the University of Michigan is more severe, and word recognition is at an all time low at 44% in my affected right ear.
Plus, to make matters worse, both of my doctors were rather passionate regarding how OTO-313 and FX-322 would not benefit me since my hearing loss was caused by an Acoustic Neuroma rather than the traditional hearing loss of "old age, etc."
They both said this was the case as well regarding Cochlear Implants since my hearing loss was caused by a brain tumor.
She also confirmed most people who have Gamma Knife lose most of their hearing after 10-years in the treated ear.
Anyhow, as you know everyone's situation is different. I'm still confident I made the right decision selecting GK, seeing how many people in support groups have to suffer from facial nerve damage.
In any event, I will be trying Resound One and Phonak hearing aids next month to see if they may help my catastrophic tinnitus by amplifying natural sound.
As I promised, here are my two most recent audiograms. The first from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor this afternoon, followed by my previous audiogram just 3 months earlier from Michigan Ear Institute.
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I second this. I have just read through this thread. My thoughts and best wishes are with both of you.Hey @Guywithapug and @gregmech26, I just wanted to chime in and say you guys are absolute warriors for going through this. Seriously lads, pat yourselves on the back. I've read thru your stories and my heart goes out to you. You guys have handled it all way better than I ever would've in your shoes. I hate the fact I can't do sweet fuck all to help, in a tangible sense, but I still want to send as much brotherly love and support your way that I can.
Keep fighting the good fight boys.
Awesome!Week 27 Update.
Just got my 6 month post-surgery MRI results back. All looks to be good, significant central tumor necrosis (approximately 40-50% cell death) and some swelling, which was expected.
Next MRI at the very end of the year, hopefully the swelling will begin to subside, but it still may be too soon. Year 2 and 3 scans will be the most telling if the procedure is a success at halting growth. Here's crossing my fingers in the long run.
No additional hearing loss, tinnitus still at a moderate hiss most days. Reactive tinnitus appears to have toned down slightly.
Have a wonderful day!
Sorry for the delayed response, I never saw any notification for your post. Thanks for the well wishes, things are going ok so far and hopefully it will continue to get better.Merry Christmas! That's the best gift ever. Your situation reminds me a lot of my case.
I'm glad you have enough hearing left that the hearing aid helps. I fear what I will do when I go completely deaf in my right ear and the hearing aid will no longer be beneficial.
I started going to the University of Michigan Tinnitus Clinic in Ann Arbor and the Audiologists there have helped a lot.
I found continual daily use of the hearing aid helps the most, even when I don't feel like wearing it. It's like going to the gym. You have to wear it everyday even if you don't feel like it.
I also have high frequency hearing loss, light headedness and fatigue. I'm almost 6 years out of Gamma Knife.
Now I'm experiencing forgetfulness / short-term memory less; however, at age 47 that could be the result of anything.
Thanks for the update and continued success.
I've had 3 rounds of injections to date, spaced about 4 months apart. The first time I got Botox, the next day was a quiet day for me but was short lived as it got louder the following day. So I didn't associate any positive change with the treatment.@Guywithapug, just curious regarding what you wrote about TMD and Botox somewhere else on the forum. You seem to have good experience. You said:
I have TMJ, well technically it's TMD but anyway I get Botox injections in the jaw a couple times a year and it helps a lot.
Does it affect your tinnitus in any way too? Positive? Like a synergy effect of more relaxed jaw muscles/masseter?
I had a session with my neurologist today, and we are thinking of giving me an injection of Botox. I had TMD, but more tingling sensations, on/off, as of lately. She thinks I might respond good to this. I have many of the same symptoms as you btw.
No adverse effects for you?