I have had a very mild high pitched tone in the right ear since I was about 18 and I'm 24 now. A couple of days ago I got this really invasive low pitch noise.
The Doctor's clinic gave me an appointment with a nurse who says that A. it could be an infection with fluid behind the ear that she can't see B. there is wax in there, so there could be a block and C. she couldn't see the light reflecting off my ear drum which means it might be burst? I don't buy the last one I think I'd be in way more pain than just a mild scratchy pain in my ear that comes and goes.
So all in all she must have looked at it for less than 5 seconds, drew three maybe conclusions, wrote me a prescription for penicillin because it was her best guess was an infection seeing as I said I felt nauseous at work. And now I'm in this very confused, uncertain place where I'm having a lot of anxiety (I have diagnosed severe anxiety) about whether this is permanent, or an infection or a block.
My boyfriend is convinced it's a block because that's what he had and when he had it irrigated he was cured of all ear problems so he keeps pushing for me to pay to have it done (you can't get it on the NHS in the UK, well you miiiiight be able to in some places, and in some circumstances) but I've read that it could potentially make it worse? That terrifies me to no end, the worst part is its making the original high pitched tone worse or more noticeable I can't tell.
What my current plan is is to run the course of antibiotics till Wednesday and if there is no improvement (which I honestly can't see happening) to see a Doctor this time and get a more solid insight, I am considering after that having a micro-vacuum done privately. I just don't really understand why we cannot know much about what is happening? Is it because stuff can go wrong behind the ear-drum? Is my ear drum burst? Infection? Am I stuck with a new tone? Should I get the vacuum? Will it make it worse? So so many questions with no solid answers. You see my frustration. Well, it's a very frustrating illness.
If anyone has any advice at all, I'd really really appreciate it,
Thanks!
The Doctor's clinic gave me an appointment with a nurse who says that A. it could be an infection with fluid behind the ear that she can't see B. there is wax in there, so there could be a block and C. she couldn't see the light reflecting off my ear drum which means it might be burst? I don't buy the last one I think I'd be in way more pain than just a mild scratchy pain in my ear that comes and goes.
So all in all she must have looked at it for less than 5 seconds, drew three maybe conclusions, wrote me a prescription for penicillin because it was her best guess was an infection seeing as I said I felt nauseous at work. And now I'm in this very confused, uncertain place where I'm having a lot of anxiety (I have diagnosed severe anxiety) about whether this is permanent, or an infection or a block.
My boyfriend is convinced it's a block because that's what he had and when he had it irrigated he was cured of all ear problems so he keeps pushing for me to pay to have it done (you can't get it on the NHS in the UK, well you miiiiight be able to in some places, and in some circumstances) but I've read that it could potentially make it worse? That terrifies me to no end, the worst part is its making the original high pitched tone worse or more noticeable I can't tell.
What my current plan is is to run the course of antibiotics till Wednesday and if there is no improvement (which I honestly can't see happening) to see a Doctor this time and get a more solid insight, I am considering after that having a micro-vacuum done privately. I just don't really understand why we cannot know much about what is happening? Is it because stuff can go wrong behind the ear-drum? Is my ear drum burst? Infection? Am I stuck with a new tone? Should I get the vacuum? Will it make it worse? So so many questions with no solid answers. You see my frustration. Well, it's a very frustrating illness.
If anyone has any advice at all, I'd really really appreciate it,
Thanks!