Hello. My name is Anastasia, I'm 20, and this is my second week with tinnitus. It started last Thursday.
It sounds like a high pitched wavering tone that will occasionally stop for a split second before starting up again. I can hear it in silence and quiet environments, but most of the time I can mask it if I'm doing something.
The strange thing about it is that I have it in my right ear only, and I have no clue what caused it.
On top of this, I have no other symptoms. It bothered me a lot, so I went to see my GP the day after the T started; she found my right nostril to be congested when she looked into it and found some water in my right ear. Assuming it was the congestion causing the ringing, she recommended to me a nasal spray and Sudafed PE congestion tablets.
She wanted me to return after three weeks if the ringing persisted. Since the T started, I have had very bad anxiety, felt nauseous, and couldn't eat properly. I have also had trouble sleeping and have been using a fan at night to mask out the tone. The T also seemed to get worse. I got impatient and scheduled an appointment with an ENT specialist.
Day of the appointment, which was 8/10, I described to him the situation, and he completely dismissed what my GP put me on. My vitals were perfect, and so were my ears. He didn't find any problems with the eardrums, no excessive wax, no sign of infection, the water wasn't there anymore, nothing. Only thing worth mentioning was, again, my congestion.
He then let an audiologist take over, who performed a standard audiogram on me. The results showed my ears were working perfectly fine with no sign of hearing loss.
ENT got back to me and explained the results, mentioning that what I had was more than likely temporary. He prescribed to me Fluticasone Propionate as well as Prednisone 10 mg per day (neither of those are helping at the moment). In two weeks time, he wanted me to come back if symptoms persisted, in which case he wanted to perform a myringotomy on my affected ear. After hearing patients responses to that surgery, I am really against it as an option at the moment. It also seems oddly experimental to me.
I'm going to see another ENT specialist next week on Tuesday for a second opinion. Though I want a confident answer and solution, I have a feeling nothing will come out of that second appointment.
So this makes me wonder: is it really possible that what I'm having is just a temporary occurrence, despite there being no known cause for what my ear is going through?
A lot of people say it doesn't go away, and a lot of other people affected seem to at least have some other symptoms. The only things I can come up with as a cause for my T at the moment is a sugar-heavy diet, excessive caffeine, immersing my head in water when bathing, using q-tips to clean out wax (I don't do that anymore), bad posture that strains my neck, and a cold.
The ENT specialist I went to see already ruled out most of what I listed above.
I'm really sure what to expect with my current situation, and any advice would be helpful.
It sounds like a high pitched wavering tone that will occasionally stop for a split second before starting up again. I can hear it in silence and quiet environments, but most of the time I can mask it if I'm doing something.
The strange thing about it is that I have it in my right ear only, and I have no clue what caused it.
On top of this, I have no other symptoms. It bothered me a lot, so I went to see my GP the day after the T started; she found my right nostril to be congested when she looked into it and found some water in my right ear. Assuming it was the congestion causing the ringing, she recommended to me a nasal spray and Sudafed PE congestion tablets.
She wanted me to return after three weeks if the ringing persisted. Since the T started, I have had very bad anxiety, felt nauseous, and couldn't eat properly. I have also had trouble sleeping and have been using a fan at night to mask out the tone. The T also seemed to get worse. I got impatient and scheduled an appointment with an ENT specialist.
Day of the appointment, which was 8/10, I described to him the situation, and he completely dismissed what my GP put me on. My vitals were perfect, and so were my ears. He didn't find any problems with the eardrums, no excessive wax, no sign of infection, the water wasn't there anymore, nothing. Only thing worth mentioning was, again, my congestion.
He then let an audiologist take over, who performed a standard audiogram on me. The results showed my ears were working perfectly fine with no sign of hearing loss.
ENT got back to me and explained the results, mentioning that what I had was more than likely temporary. He prescribed to me Fluticasone Propionate as well as Prednisone 10 mg per day (neither of those are helping at the moment). In two weeks time, he wanted me to come back if symptoms persisted, in which case he wanted to perform a myringotomy on my affected ear. After hearing patients responses to that surgery, I am really against it as an option at the moment. It also seems oddly experimental to me.
I'm going to see another ENT specialist next week on Tuesday for a second opinion. Though I want a confident answer and solution, I have a feeling nothing will come out of that second appointment.
So this makes me wonder: is it really possible that what I'm having is just a temporary occurrence, despite there being no known cause for what my ear is going through?
A lot of people say it doesn't go away, and a lot of other people affected seem to at least have some other symptoms. The only things I can come up with as a cause for my T at the moment is a sugar-heavy diet, excessive caffeine, immersing my head in water when bathing, using q-tips to clean out wax (I don't do that anymore), bad posture that strains my neck, and a cold.
The ENT specialist I went to see already ruled out most of what I listed above.
I'm really sure what to expect with my current situation, and any advice would be helpful.