Will a Hearing Loss Cure Also Cure Visual Snow Syndrome?

Defiant-Decay

Member
Author
Oct 1, 2019
50
26
Tinnitus Since
2019
Cause of Tinnitus
Loud noise/ music in headphones
Hello,

I developed tinnitus after an incident involving a bad pair of headphones. I've had it for four months.

I developed visual snow just last month. I'm having a really hard time dealing with it.

I was wondering if there's any hope a hearing loss cure could fix visual snow? I believe tinnitus and visual snow are connected without a shadow of a doubt, and I believe fixing hearing will fix tinnitus. Right now I just need someone to talk to who might understand, visual snow is so much worse then just tinnitus.
 
Absolutely no hope.
I'm not really sure about this. I feel like when the brain receives restored hearing signals it'll also fix whatever's wrong with visual snow.

Both are highly linked (65 percent of people with visual snow also have tinnitus). Why do you say there's no hope here?
 
Hello,

I developed tinnitus after an incident involving a bad pair of headphones. I've had it for four months.

I developed visual snow just last month. I'm having a really hard time dealing with it.

I was wondering if there's any hope a hearing loss cure could fix visual snow? I believe tinnitus and visual snow are connected without a shadow of a doubt, and I believe fixing hearing will fix tinnitus. Right now I just need someone to talk to who might understand, visual snow is so much worse then just tinnitus.
Of course there is a possibility that this could, as well as stop floaters. My floaters started after I got tinnitus and they fluctuate too. Some days they are bad, and other days I don't see a single one.
 
Of course there is a possibility that this could, as well as stop floaters. My floaters started after I got tinnitus and they fluctuate too. Some days they are bad, and other days I don't see a single one.
Yeah I'm not sure if those are normal floaters because normally floaters don't fluctuate so you might have a small symptom of visual snow. I also never had floaters until a month ago. Now oddly enough I see a small dot in certain lighting. It used to be multiple floaters but now it's just the dot :confused:
 
Yeah I'm not sure if those are normal floaters because normally floaters don't fluctuate so you might have a small symptom of visual snow. I also never had floaters until a month ago. Now oddly enough I see a small dot in certain lighting. It used to be multiple floaters but now it's just the dot :confused:
I also have very light VS if I look at the shadows in evergreen treens. But yes, I have fluctuating floaters.
 
Have you gotten used to it? I just got mild visual snow, I see it on everything and I'm kind of struggling with it.
It is so light that it was never a problem. Like I said I really, weirdly, have only noticed it looking in the dark parts of evergreen trees. Nowhere else. Just checked, yep, looks like a light mist swirling around.

upload_2019-12-27_10-40-7.png
 
It is so light that it was never a problem. Like I said I really, weirdly, have only noticed it looking in the dark parts of evergreen trees. Nowhere else. Just checked, yep, looks like a light mist swirling around.

View attachment 34145

So weird. I have a mild form of it which I feel like happens when you get floaters? Maybe it's a result of your visual cortex actively working to minimize the appearance of floaters (notice when one stops moving, it simply disappears). I do get swirlies if I look up at a bright blue sky. I don't really care, as long as it doesn't get worse. Floaters suck, but not nearly as much as tinnitus.
 
Hello,

I developed tinnitus after an incident involving a bad pair of headphones. I've had it for four months.

I developed visual snow just last month. I'm having a really hard time dealing with it.

I was wondering if there's any hope a hearing loss cure could fix visual snow? I believe tinnitus and visual snow are connected without a shadow of a doubt, and I believe fixing hearing will fix tinnitus. Right now I just need someone to talk to who might understand, visual snow is so much worse then just tinnitus.
I think hearing loss just makes everything worse, it is just another problem on top of the others.
 
It is so light that it was never a problem. Like I said I really, weirdly, have only noticed it looking in the dark parts of evergreen tr
So weird. I have a mild form of it which I feel like happens when you get floaters? Maybe it's a result of your visual cortex actively working to minimize the appearance of floaters (notice when one stops moving, it simply disappears). I do get swirlies if I look up at a bright blue sky. I don't really care, as long as it doesn't get worse. Floaters suck, but not nearly as much as tinnitus.
What you have is called "Blue field entoptic phenomenon", floaters aren't the same thing as visual snow but everyone with visual snow has Blue field entoptic phenomenon.
 
Everyone watch this video:


"Tinnitus and VS are located in the same part of the brain"
"Nearly 80% of people with visual snow have tinnitus"
 
It is so light that it was never a problem. Like I said I really, weirdly, have only noticed it looking in the dark parts of evergreen trees. Nowhere else. Just checked, yep, looks like a light mist swirling around.

View attachment 34145
I'm sorry you see it at all :(
I'm starting to see it everywhere unfortunately, i think visual snow research will find where tinnitus is in the brain.
 
What you have is called "Blue field entoptic phenomenon", floaters aren't the same thing as visual snow but everyone with visual snow has Blue field entoptic phenomenon.

So it does have a name. Did some reading and it appears to have nothing to do with visual snow, and everyone has it. It's just part of our biology. So maybe I don't have visual snow. If I'm in a dark place of course I see a bit of static if I try to pay attention to it, but honestly I've always thought that's just our brains turning up the ISO (or gain) of the perceived image.
 
So it does have a name. Did some reading and it appears to have nothing to do with visual snow, and everyone has it. It's just part of our biology. So maybe I don't have visual snow. If I'm in a dark place of course I see a bit of static if I try to pay attention to it, but honestly I've always thought that's just our brains turning up the ISO (or gain) of the perceived image.
If you see static with your eyes closed, are sensitive to light, have trouble seeing in the dark, easily get migraines, see afterimages or light trailing, see flashes of light with eyes closed and have Blue field entoptic phenomenon, then you have visual snow.
 
If you see static with your eyes closed, are sensitive to light, have trouble seeing in the dark, easily get migraines, see afterimages or light trailing, see flashes of light with eyes closed and have Blue field entoptic phenomenon, then you have visual snow.

Nope, only the blue field entoptic phenomenon, which alone is not a result of visual snow. It's blue light passing through white blood cells in the capillaries that the retina is detecting. Normal biology.
 
Nope, only the blue field entoptic phenomenon, which alone is not a result of visual snow. It's blue light passing through white blood cells in the capillaries that the retina is detecting. Normal biology.
Haha lucky you :)

I'm not sure why everyone with visual snow has blue field entoptic phenomenon. This is a brain scratcher.
 
To be fair I never saw blue field entoptic phenomenon until I got visual snow.

Probably because you didn't notice it until you suddenly started having a visual disturbance you weren't used to, which caused you to be hyper aware. I noticed it on rare occasions before I had floaters, and now I notice it much more often when looking at a bright sky. The only thing that changed was my perception of it.

An investigation of the source of the phenomenon. If you don't have this phenomenon then you aren't getting white blood cells in your capillaries, which would be a serious problem.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2703307

If you don't see it then your brain filters it out amazingly well.
 
Probably because you didn't notice it until you suddenly started having a visual disturbance you weren't used to, which caused you to be hyper aware. I noticed it on rare occasions before I had floaters, and now I notice it much more often when looking at a bright sky. The only thing that changed was my perception of it.

An investigation of the source of the phenomenon. If you don't have this phenomenon then you aren't getting white blood cells in your capillaries, which would be a serious problem.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2703307

If you don't see it then your brain filters it out amazingly well.
Yes but I believe visual snow is the brain failing to filter out things in general.
 
What you have is called "Blue field entoptic phenomenon", floaters aren't the same thing as visual snow but everyone with visual snow has Blue field entoptic phenomenon.

Not correct, I have VS, but no BFEP. No floaters, no white dots darting around when looking at the sky. And it has been this way for the past half year since I developed VS.
If your tinnitus and VS aren't too bad, you should eventually get used to it. Took me about 8 months and I'm generally habituated. Life isn't perfect but a lot better than when I got these conditions. I feel ok waiting a couple years for a treatment...
 
Not correct, I have VS, but no BFEP. No floaters, no white dots darting around when looking at the sky. And it has been this way for the past half year since I developed VS.
If your tinnitus and VS aren't too bad, you should eventually get used to it. Took me about 8 months and I'm generally habituated. Life isn't perfect but a lot better than when I got these conditions. I feel ok waiting a couple years for a treatment...
That's very interesting. Do you have any other symptoms other than just the static?
 
That's very interesting. Do you have any other symptoms other than just the static?

My symptoms:
- mild tinnitus that generally can always be heard (low volume, very high pitch)
- no apparent hearing loss (I assume some hearing loss 14k< ).
- translucent visual snow (like a drizzle)
- slight trailing
- slight negative afterimages
- starbursts, bigger halos around lights and somewhat worse contrast sight (though no problems at night).
 
My symptoms:
- mild tinnitus that generally can always be heard (low volume, very high pitch)
- no apparent hearing loss (I assume some hearing loss 14k< ).
- translucent visual snow (like a drizzle)
- slight trailing
- slight negative afterimages
- starbursts, bigger halos around lights and somewhat worse contrast sight (though no problems at night).
You basically have my symptoms, how did you get yours?
And did it get any worse?

I'm only a month in. Thank you for responding. These symptoms have been driving me up the wall, I've only recently learned how to rest/keep calm.
 

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