Hyperacusis surgeries and options...
Just decided to stay on this thread. I will be applying for compassionate use for NHPN-1010 - the Hough Ear Institute pill. Gonna see how that works out.
I'm on a low histamine diet, helps around 10%.
I will be getting massive amounts of exosome and stem cell injections through IV and IT which is in my ear.
I'm pretty sure I have a perilymph fistula in my right ear (my better ear). After getting a blood patch, both ears felt better and the noxaxusis in my left ear felt temporarily better too. I will have to try more blood patches to see if it seals the leak for good.
I have many more conservative things on my list to rule out. As you all know traveling with severe hyperacusis and noxacusis is horrible.
After a few more drugs and therapies, if nothing still brings me even a little more relief, I will I have to start doing surgeries.
I truly want to wait and see how all the trial results come out this year with FX-322, OTO-313, OTO-413, and PIPE-505. As you all know they are IT injections too, so if I acted too fast and got my round and oval windows packed, these drugs would have no effect on me and I would be dealing with this the rest of my life. All of these treatments should be coming out this year, latest early next year. Then we got Sound Pharmaceuticals' Ebselen, and potassium channel modulators that could help as well but those are oral. I just need to make it another year. If everything seems like it will fail, which is unlikely, I will have the green light. There's also Susan Shore's device for tinnitus which could help a lot if my tinnitus got worse.
For those of you who don't know, the Silverstein surgery takes tissue from your body and packs it in your inner ear covering the round and oval windows, and he also uses it to reinforce the stapes which can cause hyperacusis and pain as well. For all I know my stapes footplate could be getting yanked like crazy which is causing my pain. I am worried about my tinnitus but most people seem ok tinnitus wise after the surgery. I think it would help me around 20-30 percent, I'm not expecting any miracles. I also have been reading and it seems disconnecting the middle ear bones is another last resort option. I risk my tinnitus getting much worse but from what it seems my tinnitus is not from hearing loss, it's more nerve and synapse damage.
Round and Oval Window Reinforcement Surgery
Seems this has been done before, but for people who have bad hearing already. It seems it can act as a super earplug and could give up to 50 dB in hearing loss. Many people without hyperacusis are worried about tinnitus and hearing loss, my hearing is no longer an issue to me. Being in this much pain has far more effect on me than being deaf. I could live pretty happily bring deaf, especially only in one ear. My audiograms are probably one of the best on the planet and I don't mean that in a bragging kind of way.
My audiograms are scary, I hear pretty much negative decibels all the way up to 16 kHz. Let that sink in, I hear 5-10 negative dB where most average people hear between 10-20 dB if they have healthy hearing. I have had 20 audiograms. I wish I was making this up. I mean it's just that bad. My hearing has been this good ever since the fistula. My LDLs (loudness discomfort levels) have been in the 50-60 dB for a year and I was still going to the gym and working and pushing through it. It was not enough to stop me. When the severe pain came in from the car accident it changed the game.
I still left the house for 5 more months until the pain got so bad I would start throwing up. Like the issue is that every time I set the pain off, my LDLs permanently worsen and the pain gets easier to trigger, and gets more severe every time with minor recovery. The silence and time I need is virtually impossible for a human to withstand it. I would have to lock myself in a soundproof box for 5 years, not eat, not sneeze, and make 0 noise. That's not even possible.
If anybody has any input is middle ear disconnection I would appreciate it. This is literally second to last resort, besides completely destroying the cochlea. I need to get my game plan in order, because if it keeps worsening, I won't be able to function to finish the plan and my next move. It seems middle ear stuff can be fixed or reconnected through surgery. So it's not a "forever I'm screwed" kind of thing. Cochlear destruction definitely is.
I truly think if I had 50 dB of hearing loss in that ear it would help tremendously, and on top of Silverstein surgery, theoretically I should be able to start living life again. With an earplug in, my LDLs could go up from 20 dB to around 70 dB. That should give my cochlea enough time to rest and for the overexcited Type 2 nerves to calm down. Just a theory...