Blow Drying Ears?

Discussion in 'Support' started by Stacey427, Oct 5, 2017.

    1. Stacey427
      Alienated

      Stacey427 Member

      Location:
      Australia
      Tinnitus Since:
      August 2014
      Hi All,

      Haven't posted in such a long long time, just been living with it. I've learnt to live (I guess) with it.

      General question: I've had a spike (higher additional pitch squeal) in both ears after blow drying my ear canals.

      Now I do this after I wash my hair to dry out any possible water residue (to hopefully prevent infections etc and water getting trapped as been prone too). I hold my hairdryer approx 20-30 cm away from my ear canals and blast on cool, gently, for about 5-6 minutes per ear. Now usually I'm ok, but unfortunately tonight I've had an increase which isn't going away and I find it rather upsetting.

      I guess I'm basically asking have I done further permanent damage by doing this? I do it approx once a fortnight and usually I'm ok, but now it's bad and won't go back down! Naturally I'm anxious and upset.

      I also did a decibel reading and the blow dryer got up to 105 dB.

      Should I be seriously worried?

      Thanks in advance all. X
       
      • Hug Hug x 1
    2. Lex
      Blah

      Lex Member Benefactor

      Tinnitus Since:
      07/2016
      Cause of Tinnitus:
      Bad decisions
      Since you already have T, please don't blow-dry your ears again. I think it's unnecessary noise exposure.
       
      • Agree Agree x 3
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    3. jimH
      Caffeine

      jimH Member Benefactor

      Tinnitus Since:
      30 years+
      Cause of Tinnitus:
      Acoustic trauma
      @Stacey427 ...It's probably just a temporary spike. However, I do agree with @Lex. Don't continue to blow dry your ears. For a person with Tinnitus, that's really pushing your luck !

      You state that your hair dryer is 105 db. You might want to consider this low-noise dryer from Panasonic. The customer reviews are very positive. Mostly five stars except one 4 star. It's also rated at 12oo watts. So, it's not low noise because of low power. It works ok on 110 volts outlet power that we have here in the USA. However, I don't know what standard outlet voltage is there in Australia and if it can operate on that voltage. You can post that question there on Amazon:

      https://www.amazon.com/Panasonic-Lo...07214943&sr=8-1&keywords=low+noise+hair+dryer
       
      • Agree Agree x 1
    4. GregCA
      Jaded

      GregCA Member Benefactor Hall of Fame

      Tinnitus Since:
      03/2016
      Cause of Tinnitus:
      Otosclerosis
      I wouldn't dry my ears with a blow dryer.
      The chances of infection are really slim since the water that could possibly be trapped is from your hair wash, which means it's treated (I assume drinkable tap water). Infections usually occur from water that is untreated (when you swim in the sea/ocean/lake, etc).
      If you feel water in your ear and it bothers you, you could try to tilt you head to let the water escape through natural gravity, or just wait until it evaporates naturally.
       
      • Agree Agree x 1
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