- Feb 17, 2017
- 10,400
- Tinnitus Since
- February, 2017
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Acoustic Trauma
I wouldn't worry too much about what they say. From the experiences of people on this site, it seems they don't actually know anything about hearing.An ENT I went to told my cochlear hair cell regeneration is 100 years away.
The second ENT I went to knew about Charles Liberman's research and seemed hopeful for Frequency Therapeutics.I wouldn't worry too much about what they say. From the experiences of people on this site, it seems they don't actually know anything about hearing.
Seems like some are more intelligent with hearing regeneration than others. My main issue with ENTs are they're a mixed bag. Some are super helpful and educated on hearing loss, most aren't.The second ENT I went to knew about Charles Liberman's research and seemed hopeful for Frequency Therapeutics.
Shocking...There's no point injecting steroids in the ear since you can only inject into the middle ear, not the cochlea where the damage is. Reality: The drug passes from the middle to inner ear through a membrane called the round window. He later gave me the injection, but only after I explained to him how this works and he looked it up in front of me on his computer. Since it was several weeks too late, it didn't help.
WOW, this is the best thing I have read on this forum. My ENT wanted me to do a CT scan, MRI, EcOG, vEMP, Caloric test, etc as she thought I had acoustic neuroma, Meniere's, cochlear hydrops, now that she made it worse by misguiding me and brushing the acoustic trauma as a small possibility the condition worsened. Last time I saw her she said she has faith in me that I will get better and return to where I was before (mild tinnitus).My ENT told me:
It still infuriates me to think about it. As far as I can tell, the ENT's real purpose is to hurt you as much as possible by directing you to treatments that sound plausible but which won't help you, or will actually hurt you. It's like a game where you have to work through his BS to figure out the real answer he's trying to trick you into missing.
- There's no point injecting steroids in the ear since you can only inject into the middle ear, not the cochlea where the damage is. Reality: The drug passes from the middle to inner ear through a membrane called the round window. He later gave me the injection, but only after I explained to him how this works and he looked it up in front of me on his computer. Since it was several weeks too late, it didn't help.
- The right dose for steroids for me is 30mg. I'm 90kg. Reality: My dose should be 60mg at least. He said this even after I said I thought the dose should be 60mg - he specifically drove me away from the correct treatment, during the time window when it could have helped. He later gave me 60mg, but it was weeks too late and didn't help.
- I should take a MRI. Reasonable enough. He never mentioned earplugs. The MRI is insanely loud and would have done serious damage to my ears. Thankfully by this time my trust in him had reached basically zero - he was just a guy to sign papers for medical interventions I had researched and decided I should get. So I did bring my own earplugs. But seriously - sending someone with recent noise-induced ear injury into a metal tube to be blasted with 100dB banging noises for a half hour... what could they be thinking???
Anyway, my ears are still ringing.
I was also in 72 hours after onset (ENTs are quite accessible in this country) but I only got 30mg of Prednisone and some really bad advice.Shocking...
I got lucky and had an appointment with an ENT 72 hours after the onset of my tinnitus. As soon as he heard the word tinnitus, he lost interest and then sent me on my way. He could have tried those injections and they might have helped...
I actually wanted the MRI, I think it's the right thing to do to just cross acoustic neuroma and some other MRI-visible issues off the list. So going to the MRI wasn't the issue. The issue is that they sent me without earplugs, which is insane.If someone has physical tinnitus where their neck hurts, had an accident or has a jaw problem then a X-ray and CT may be advisable. A CT isn't nearly as loud as a MRI. Just wear earplugs for a CT. A CT exam is a lot quicker, but there is some radiation exposure. I've had both X-rays and CT of neck and facial. There is some imaging result differences between a CT and MRI. To know the differences just research CT of neck and head versus a MRI.
There has been very few reports that a CT has caused problems of increased tinnitus as an ear reaction where noise wasn't a factor. I would like to know if anyone here had a head CT exam without contrast and had a problem.
An ENT I went to told my cochlear hair cell regeneration is 100 years away.
It's already been done in rodents. Human trials are upcoming. It won't be long.
In the "modern era" the ENT has become almost a useless "profession" in that there is little or nothing that they are able to do, and refuse to admit it. The examinations are routine, looking for wax, obstructions, tearing, -- anything physical, in the nose throat, eustachian tube, inside the ear canal. The common "everyday" ENT is probably only good just to prescribe an antibiotic for an ear infection, clean out wax, make sure you don't have polyps blocking up your sinus, but for little else. Oh they can "fix" some things in the ossicular chain, possibly close holes here and there, give you antibiotics for that. Just be real, real, real <emphasis!> careful about letting them fool around with your inner ear, and especially, never allow them to diagnose you with hearing loss without firstly getting a 2nd, even a 3rd opinion. Remember, they tend to "work together" to protect each other, especially if one of them renders an erroneous diagnosis and does something to actually cause you harm, cause you to lose your hearing, create life-long problems, e.g. tinnitus, etc. They always close ranks and obfuscate! You will be put into "circular orbit" in perpetuity, not just by the "local" ENT's but the higher up otolaryngologists, oto-neurologists, audiologists, even the hearing aid dispensers! Have any of you noticed that there are NO statistical studies regarding the myriad of problems created by this new-fangled invention called the "cochlear implant"? The media loves to chortle over the success stories, but what about the ones that -- are really messed up neurologically-- lose their sense of taste, smell, feeling in face, and a host of other neurological issues? Never hear about them because those patients are SHUT DOWN! Nobody has any stats, not the National Institute of Health, not the CI manufacturers, not the doctors, not the FDA, -- nobody. The business is too lucrative for them and woe be to anyone trying to mess it up! <ducking>My ENT was completely useless. I got the impression that I am not the only one who has had a bad experience with an ENT...
In certain light it is refreshing that he was honest. But of course there are ways to convey this information that result in the patient not being as traumatized...Not an ENT but I saw a Dr at the start of the year, the first thing he said to me was "oh dear tinnitus is not good.. A LOT of elderly patients end up killing themselves :/ not good at all...."
No joke!
Did any of the doctors make your tinnitus worse? The above seems to imply that they were not helpful, but earlier in your post it sounded like one of the doctors had actually harmed you.When I turned to the first otorhinolaryngologist - he told me that he does not understand the rumor, it's not his specialty. That I need to go to the city in a nearby city.
I went there, they assured me that everything was all right, and I just got nervous.
Then I was sent to the X-ray of the temporal bone, then to the neurologist.
In general, I spent a fortune on going to the doctors (it was not covered by my insurance, since I was not in my city.) And I did not achieve anything.