Dr. Nagler,
Thank you for all kind help and support you are so selflessly giving to us. I've been reading your answers regularly and most were very helpful to me.
But even if you have answered some of my concerns, especially in regard to tinnitus, I still have some doubts and questions about hyperacusis.
A little history of mine: I got tinnitus (very high pitched, unmaskable, fluctuating) one year ago after few years of severe stress events and one week after too loud concert, one and only in decades. I am 60 y.o. female. One and half month after that I got hyperacusis, worser in left ear, which I would rate as quite severe. I have moderate high frequency hearing loss in that ear at 8 Khz (50 dbs), other things are normal for my age. MRI exam was fine, so was ENT exam.
At beginning even typing on keyboard or switching on a light or flushing a toilet irritated me, besides all other things that people here report (a running water, dishes, birds singing etc.). Severity lowered a bit after few months, but still I was not be able to be in a restaurant, in a room with more people talking etc. In November it suddenly became worse again (one week after dental work, one day after very stressful event on which I just couldn't calm myself down no mater what I tried). MRI followed two weeks after that as well. Since then it hasn't improved at all, what more, I got occasional like spasms in my left (worse) ear, some kind of pressure, pain, even in face or head, which I didn't have before. If I breath more deeply, I feel like the air goes directly into my ear and irritates me deep inside, like if I have a wound there. I also have to talk quietly as even my own voice irritates me, what to say other people's voices.
I also have some kind of distorted hearing, all music, especially high frequencies are very amplified, more metal and somehow vibrating in my ear. Hard to explain, but for sure not pleasant to listen to music at all. For that reason I can't have a lot of background music for my tinnitus (white noise, pink noise, rain, water running etc. irritate to much). Just to add: I don't overprotect my ears at all, except if I have to go to restaurant during lunch time, at work if I have a client, when dying my hear, vacuuming etc. I rather avoid too loud situations because my tinnitus is too loud to be able to block the outside noise too often with plugs. I still work (office work), even if it is not easy at all. It is either too quiet or too loud, when people rush in and around, doors slumming, laughing. I feel somehow that all the energy I have left is used for going through the day without exposing myself to too harsh, loud, irritating noises and to dealing with tinnitus.
So to my question:
Lana
Thank you for all kind help and support you are so selflessly giving to us. I've been reading your answers regularly and most were very helpful to me.
But even if you have answered some of my concerns, especially in regard to tinnitus, I still have some doubts and questions about hyperacusis.
A little history of mine: I got tinnitus (very high pitched, unmaskable, fluctuating) one year ago after few years of severe stress events and one week after too loud concert, one and only in decades. I am 60 y.o. female. One and half month after that I got hyperacusis, worser in left ear, which I would rate as quite severe. I have moderate high frequency hearing loss in that ear at 8 Khz (50 dbs), other things are normal for my age. MRI exam was fine, so was ENT exam.
At beginning even typing on keyboard or switching on a light or flushing a toilet irritated me, besides all other things that people here report (a running water, dishes, birds singing etc.). Severity lowered a bit after few months, but still I was not be able to be in a restaurant, in a room with more people talking etc. In November it suddenly became worse again (one week after dental work, one day after very stressful event on which I just couldn't calm myself down no mater what I tried). MRI followed two weeks after that as well. Since then it hasn't improved at all, what more, I got occasional like spasms in my left (worse) ear, some kind of pressure, pain, even in face or head, which I didn't have before. If I breath more deeply, I feel like the air goes directly into my ear and irritates me deep inside, like if I have a wound there. I also have to talk quietly as even my own voice irritates me, what to say other people's voices.
I also have some kind of distorted hearing, all music, especially high frequencies are very amplified, more metal and somehow vibrating in my ear. Hard to explain, but for sure not pleasant to listen to music at all. For that reason I can't have a lot of background music for my tinnitus (white noise, pink noise, rain, water running etc. irritate to much). Just to add: I don't overprotect my ears at all, except if I have to go to restaurant during lunch time, at work if I have a client, when dying my hear, vacuuming etc. I rather avoid too loud situations because my tinnitus is too loud to be able to block the outside noise too often with plugs. I still work (office work), even if it is not easy at all. It is either too quiet or too loud, when people rush in and around, doors slumming, laughing. I feel somehow that all the energy I have left is used for going through the day without exposing myself to too harsh, loud, irritating noises and to dealing with tinnitus.
So to my question:
- What could be done by myself to improve my hyperacusis?
I must say that doctors here in my country are helpless, TRT is out of question as nobody offer it. I read a lot about my condition on net, the most common approach is sound therapy which I find difficult as all sounds irritate me. I haven't tried white noise in ear generators because nobody offers it, nor the counselling. How to start? What to use instead of in ear noise generators? Or is it better just to be in relative silence for some time?
- Does sound distortion improve with time? How long can it takes? Should I listen to music on very low volume nevertheless (e.g. at work place) or better to just leave it?
- Am I preventing possible improvement if I am daily exposing myself to "ordinary" sounds which are not loud at all, but irritating to my ears nevertheless (running water, dealing with papers at my desk, far away traffic, normal talk, careful handling with dishes), even if such sounds will not cause a damage to my hearing system?
Should I protect my ears when sounds are louder and painful, but not too loud for other people (like laughing at work place, louder talks, restaurants without any music, walking by not too busy street etc.)?
- Is it OK if I plug one ear only because in most situations when there is only moderate noise around that would be enough to take the edge off.
Lana