Why Advise Against Headphones?

Ento

Member
Author
Benefactor
Feb 21, 2018
32
Northern Europe
Tinnitus Since
01/2018
Cause of Tinnitus
Acoustic trauma? Stress? Both?
I read on this forum that some people advise against using headphones, even at low volume. I cannot understand why. If the volume is low, how could it be a problem?

I work in a noisy office environment and have to use headphones to be able to concentrate. Also I use them for masking my tinnitus.
 
Think about what you just said. Just think about it for a minute.
 
The need for scientific validation frustrates at times. Just because there hasn't been a paper published, it doesn't invalidate the testimonies of many who have experienced something.

It seems common sense to not stick something into your ears to play sound that close to your eardrum when you have a noise-induced condition.
 
I seem to be in the minority here but I've been using in ear earphones the last couple of years and have had no problems. Was scared for a long time because of the hyperacusis I used to deal with but after that went away I slowly brought them back into my regime. Use them when traveling and going to the gym mainly.

I could see the argument going either way and it just depends what you feel comfortable with. I could see in ear earphones being possibly more dangerous because they are physically in your ear and producing sound, so possibly in addition to the sound being produced by the speaker, there might be some sort of physical conduction from the earphone being physically connected to the ear canal. Have no science to back that up though, but I haven't bothered to do the research. In that case, you could consider over-the-ear style headphones which would possibly pose less risk but you will have a gang of members here say that could possibly dangerous also.

In my case it's been A-OK but everyone is different. The way I see it is 60db is 60db, regardless of whether it is produced from speaker or earphone. If you want to take into account some possible conduction from the physical attachment of the gear then use it at an even lower volume and limit your time with them, take regular breaks, etc.
 
I use headphones very seldomly now, Michael Leigh has a point.

The synapses that connect hair cells to the audiotory nerve are damaged if one has noise induced tinnitus and more fragile then in healthy ears.

There isn't yet a way to repair ribbon synapses or cochlear hair cells so obviously be very careful with headphones.
 
I read on this forum that some people advise against using headphones, even at low volume. I cannot understand why. If the volume is low, how could it be a problem?

I work in a noisy office environment and have to use headphones to be able to concentrate. Also I use them for masking my tinnitus.

Headphones in a quiet environment on low is probably okay. Headphones in a noisy environment isn't a good idea (unless they are quality noise cancelling or noise isolating headphones). The problem is you have to crank them up just to be able to hear them over the background noise.
 
Wearing ear buds, or headphones is exactly the same as wearing in ear or over ear white noise generators. A 60 dB sound is 60 dBs regardless of whether it is white noise or not. It is being projected into the ear at a certain dB range.

Also, all of the new bi-modal stimulation devices for tinnitus use headphones playing a sound into the ear. Does this mean that these researchers who have spend thousands if not millions of dollars on these products are creating something that will lessen and worsen tinnitus at the same time?

When people say "played at a low volume" I seriously question whether it to be true. Were they in a loud environment and turned it up until they could barely hear it and called it "low"? If that is the case, than no they didn't have it playing low. Also different ear buds and headphones have different minimum volumes. I have 3 different kinds and at the lowest setting each of them produce a different level of sound. I have a bluetooth one that at the lowest setting it just as loud as my apple ear buds at setting five. So this again is very subjective.

Also, there are different types of headphones such as open back, which allow sound to leave the back of the headphones. This way the sound has the ability to escape and now just get pumped into your ear.

I say this because I have had tinnitus my entire life (before my recent loud noise exposure that increased it) and I had always used headphones of all kinds. I never, ever had a problem listening to anything at low volumes and it would never affect my tinnitus in the slightest. I haven't worn them since my recent noise exposure to give them time to heal (also staying away from all potential loud situations), but will try again in the near future when the bi-modal stimulation devices come out.
 
So far I have yet to read a clear scientific basis behind some of this fearmongering. Pseudo-science, yes, but nothing that really passes the smell test. Everyone knows that prolonged exposure to loud noise of any source is bad for your ears. Why do you think people who work the tarmac at the airport wear earmuffs, for instance? But it's the volume more than the source. Secondarily, the inability of air to escape from old-school 'closed' headphone designs contributes to ear-fatigue (as any studio engineer can attest to). Pete Townshend implicates headphone use in his T, although in his case it could surely be due to stage exposure (plus the explosion at the Smothers Brothers performance).

I just think the superstitions in this thread are along the same lines as people's beliefs about diet (vegan vs. keto vs. paleo). Lots of isolated anecdotes and sketchy correlation = causation linkages. But boy are people passionate about their convictions!
 
I've seen a lot of recommendations to not wear headphones - even at low volumes. What is the reasoning behind that? I understand the danger of having speakers right next to the ear because of the potential for them to be too loud. But if one is careful to keep the volume low, what other risks are there?
 
I've seen a lot of recommendations to not wear headphones - even at low volumes. What is the reasoning behind that? I understand the danger of having speakers right next to the ear because of the potential for them to be too loud. But if one is careful to keep the volume low, what other risks are there?
There is no risk of having loud speakers right next to your ear.
There is no risk to wearing headphones.

Everyday, people do damage to their hearing from riding loud motorcycles, to working in a plant environment to going to a rock concert without sound protection.

Don't kill the messenger. It's the message. Loudness kills hearing, not the messenger of the sound.

What do people do to their ears?

They listen to loud speakers too loud
They listen to headphones too loud
They install straight pipes on their motorcycle.
They drive a metal stake with a sledge hammer with no ear protection.

All about volume. Not about the sound source.
 
IMHO, the most amazing headphone experience is this song:



I've never heard another song with kind of closeness and sheer clarity in the vocals.

If I could hear this without tinnitus it would be so sweet.
 
The need for scientific validation frustrates at times. Just because there hasn't been a paper published, it doesn't invalidate the testimonies of many who have experienced something.

It seems common sense to not stick something into your ears to play sound that close to your eardrum when you have a noise-induced condition.
There are many issues with what you write.

a. Because headphones are as ubiquitous as smoking, if there were a tinnitus linkage there would be a scientific paper published. Headphones have been studied for sound damage to hearing in depth. Just like loud speakers, loud sound damages hearing. There is nothing published on NIT and headphones.

b. Noise Induced tinnitus is at worst a myth and at best a misnomer. The scientific community can't figure out how to subtype tinnitus. It is too complex. It is like discussion about race. Purity of race is a myth as well.

Somebody can attempt to subtype it of course. They could create a subset of a subtype. Like young men who go off to war and fire off munitions with constant 130 dB exposure. Is this different than an old person who has worked at a manufacturing facility for 30 years with high sound exposure? Is the cochlea damage the same? Is cumulative damage the same as more instantaneous or more precipitous damage that typically causes a greater onset of tinnitus? How about with somatic interaction? What ratio of NIT and somatic interaction is least or most problematic? How about with genetic predisposition to hearing loss? The permutations of tinnitus subtype AND INTERACTIONS with other subtypes is mind numbing. It contributes to the problem of solving it. People have different types of tinnitus even under the broad umbrella of noise Induced tinnitus. NIT can not be painted with the same broad brush as it applies to any sound source.

A sound source is a sound source is a sound source. Air percussion creates ear drum deflection. The ear drum can not differentiate source. Nor can the brain... or the brain could be fooled.

Lastly with headphones there is nothing inside the ear... or doesn't have to me. Headphones I use do not touch the ears at all.

There is one guy on here with a weird anecdotal obsession. He really believes it. People believe things. Some people think they can fly until they jump out a window and learn otherwise.
 
I read on this forum that some people advise against using headphones, even at low volume. I cannot understand why. If the volume is low, how could it be a problem?

I work in a noisy office environment and have to use headphones to be able to concentrate. Also I use them for masking my tinnitus.

You can use headphones at low volume, there is no problem with that.
 
There are also a lot of people on this forum and who have come through here who definitely do have noise induced tinnitus who also find no problem with headphones. But, of course, you ignore them, because that's what you do: you see the world as a grid of round holes, and even if I give you a bunch of square pegs, by god you're gonna hammer 'em in there.

Also if you do high frequency audiograms on people with "non noise induced tinnitus" they reliably show deficits. "Non noise induced" is probably mostly long-term hearing loss related. So we're making a distinction between noise trauma vs long term exposure, but.... according the the Shore lab, the probable neurological mechanism and treatment is the same.

FFS we have musicians on here with tinnitus who have returned to playing amped music on stage for years and it's been fine for them. Sure, some people might not be able to tolerate that and we're all different... and a lot of us can use headphones just fine, at safe volumes.

This message sent from a (NON ENT) doctors office waiting room with a pair of Sony WH1000MX3s around my neck.
 
The need for scientific validation frustrates at times. Just because there hasn't been a paper published, it doesn't invalidate the testimonies of many who have experienced something.

It seems common sense to not stick something into your ears to play sound that close to your eardrum when you have a noise-induced condition.

I think that for those of us with NIT, there truly is no volume low enough for headphones and earbuds to be safe enough for us is the bottom line.
 
There is no risk of having loud speakers right next to your ear.
"While reading, I am listening to a playlist of ambient sounds -- birdsong, babbling brook, ocean waves -- on my bluetooth headphones (Inland ProHT 87091) when without any warning an unbelievably loud burst of white noise bursts out of my headphones. It's incredibly startling and painful."
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/6817238

Yes put all your trust in sound drivers that might glitch out.
 
There's certainly a possibility that some people will get tinnitus, or have an existing case made worse, by using headphones, even at low volumes. On the other hand, nobody is going to get tinnitus, or any other ear problems, from avoiding them. I sold a pair of rare, high-end, collectible headphones last year, because I am not willing to gamble with making my tinnitus worse.
 
All I know is that I'm still shocked that using in-ear monitors at low to moderate volume gave me tinnitus... If they did.

Everyone I know that works with audio and mixing music professionally says that headphones are way more damaging to the ears than speakers and they use them very sparingly. This is from guys that listen to speakers at up to 70-84 dB up to 16 hours a day with breaks, and they don't have tinnitus. I trust their judgement personally and I'll never use headphones again because I think avoiding what caused my tinnitus is safest
 
Do you completely plug your ears to all outside sound? Astounding. Headphones and earbuds can be listened to at the threshold of audibility....barely perceivable and in fact, well underneath the sound threshold of tinnitus.

Of course one must know how to use a volume control. Most kids grasp that by the age of 4 or so.

Think of headphones like driving a car. Running over pedestrians and driving 50 mph over the speed limit and crashing into other cars is bad. Doesn't make the car bad. Just the operator.

Well, when exposed to loud noises, I do try and plug my ears for protection in fact.

https://www.healthline.com/health-news/are-your-kids-headphones-permanently-damaging-their-hearing

In fact, most children, are listening to their headphones too loudly.
 
All my hearing problems were caused by very loud noise exposure and I can use headphones at low volume with no problem.

Actually for hyperacusis one can use headphones like the Grado SR60, that type of stuff, not covering the ear, and it can be good because if you play low sounds on them they reduce the dynamic range with the sounds around (the difference in volume between the background sound and peak sounds).
 
Hey guys.

Now this is going to be controversial. So please let me know if you agree or disagree :)

I think using headphones is fine;
I think about it like this... People use hearing aids... Basically speakers in their ears all day everyday.

Therefore I propose, headphone or earphone use should be safe at safe levels (e.g 60dB)
From what we know, 60dB is safe levels.

Wouldn't this mean that if used correctly, headphones/earphones wouldn't worsen tinnitus or do damage?

(not including people with hyperacusis)

I think we get so paranoid about things worsening tinnitus.

What do you guys think?
 
Hey guys.

Now this is going to be controversial. So please let me know if you agree or disagree :)

I think using headphones is fine;
I think about it like this... People use hearing aids... Basically speakers in their ears all day everyday.

Therefore I propose, headphone or earphone use should be safe at safe levels (e.g 60dB)
From what we know, 60dB is safe levels.

Wouldn't this mean that if used correctly, headphones/earphones wouldn't worsen tinnitus or do damage?

(not including people with hyperacusis)

I think we get so paranoid about things worsening tinnitus.

What do you guys think?

How are you measuring the headphone output db value?

https://onezero.medium.com/why-airp...-especially-bad-for-your-hearing-20f32b6e02e2

I am gonna go with earbuds and headphones are not safe for folks with NIHL and NIT.
 
It's not about how loud.. its about the stigma they're bad.. when they aren't. 60dB is 60dB.

IF you knew it was 60dB, would you use them?

I only rarely used headphones and earbuds prior to all of this, and my initial acoustic trauma was from them. I really have no need for them, so I would say no.

The other issue is that I doubt we will ever know what the volume level of headphones accurately are, creating another barrier to safe use.

Why play with fire if you know you can get burnt?
 
I only rarely used headphones and earbuds prior to all of this, and my initial acoustic trauma was from them. I really have no need for them, so I would say no.

The other issue is that I doubt we will ever know what the volume level of headphones accurately are, creating another barrier to safe use.

Why play with fire if you know you can get burnt?

Most people i'd say can tell if something is too loud.. most of us were just stupid and didn't know T could happen.

But yeah fair call
 

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