- Aug 16, 2018
- 68
- Tinnitus Since
- Late Autumn 2016
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Unsure between azithromycin or viral infection
Have you experienced fluctuations or permanent hearing loss in the past or currently?
I have been doing a lot of reading and I learned that psychological stress such as chronic or acute anxiety, and other forms of stress during life events or periods could be an actual CAUSE (or at least confounding contributor) to "sudden sensorineural hearing loss" and that tinnitus is often a symptom (especially when the loss is in the high frequencies that standard audiograms do not reveal). It is believed that stress causes blood circulatory issues around the nerves connected to the cochlea and that if the nerves become inflamed whether it is by stress-induced cardiovascular stuff, or if a virus sneaks by the weakened immune response due to the existing psychological stress, that the nerves become pinched and damaged. Another theory is that other important fluids in the cochlea also become compromised and that the hair cells themselves actually die because of that.
Here are plenty of resources which seem to back that up and I can also attest to my own experiences in the past after a traumatic event, and current stress during cold and flu season (stress also lowers immune strength) could combine together to create a high risk factor for "idiopathic tinnitus", which is really just the symptom of what I explained. I've had periods of high stress followed by low stress where in between I would experience my left side hearing completely drop out with loud tinnitus flare ups, and then recover again in the same day or the next, depending on how I recover from the stress. I can rule out Meniere's disease because it doesn't exist in my family either.
Anyways, my point is that if you have access to resources, counselling, therapy, etc. for stress in general, please make use of them. If you are in a bad relationship, have bad friends, or strongly hate your job/career, that can also contribute to high levels of stress.
https://www.earq.com/for-physicians/conditions-that-can-lead-to-hearing-loss
https://sites.google.com/site/sudde...-sudden-hearing-loss-stress-as-the-root-cause
http://www.dana.org/Cerebrum/Default.aspx?id=39139
https://www.healthline.com/health/sensorineural-deafness
https://www.hear.com/hearing-loss/sudden/
https://helpingmehear.com/why-single-sided-hearing-is-a-symptom-you-should-never-ignore/amp/
https://www.nexgenhearing.com/sudden-deafness-important-things-to-know/
https://www.hearinglink.org/your-hearing/sudden-sensorineural-hearing-loss/
http://www.tinnitusjournal.com/articles/stress-and-the-onset-of-sudden-hearing-loss-and-tinnitus.pdf
http://phb.secondsensehearing.com/content/relationship-between-hearing-loss-and-stress
https://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/sudden-deafness
I have been doing a lot of reading and I learned that psychological stress such as chronic or acute anxiety, and other forms of stress during life events or periods could be an actual CAUSE (or at least confounding contributor) to "sudden sensorineural hearing loss" and that tinnitus is often a symptom (especially when the loss is in the high frequencies that standard audiograms do not reveal). It is believed that stress causes blood circulatory issues around the nerves connected to the cochlea and that if the nerves become inflamed whether it is by stress-induced cardiovascular stuff, or if a virus sneaks by the weakened immune response due to the existing psychological stress, that the nerves become pinched and damaged. Another theory is that other important fluids in the cochlea also become compromised and that the hair cells themselves actually die because of that.
Here are plenty of resources which seem to back that up and I can also attest to my own experiences in the past after a traumatic event, and current stress during cold and flu season (stress also lowers immune strength) could combine together to create a high risk factor for "idiopathic tinnitus", which is really just the symptom of what I explained. I've had periods of high stress followed by low stress where in between I would experience my left side hearing completely drop out with loud tinnitus flare ups, and then recover again in the same day or the next, depending on how I recover from the stress. I can rule out Meniere's disease because it doesn't exist in my family either.
Anyways, my point is that if you have access to resources, counselling, therapy, etc. for stress in general, please make use of them. If you are in a bad relationship, have bad friends, or strongly hate your job/career, that can also contribute to high levels of stress.
https://www.earq.com/for-physicians/conditions-that-can-lead-to-hearing-loss
https://sites.google.com/site/sudde...-sudden-hearing-loss-stress-as-the-root-cause
http://www.dana.org/Cerebrum/Default.aspx?id=39139
https://www.healthline.com/health/sensorineural-deafness
https://www.hear.com/hearing-loss/sudden/
https://helpingmehear.com/why-single-sided-hearing-is-a-symptom-you-should-never-ignore/amp/
https://www.nexgenhearing.com/sudden-deafness-important-things-to-know/
https://www.hearinglink.org/your-hearing/sudden-sensorineural-hearing-loss/
http://www.tinnitusjournal.com/articles/stress-and-the-onset-of-sudden-hearing-loss-and-tinnitus.pdf
http://phb.secondsensehearing.com/content/relationship-between-hearing-loss-and-stress
https://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/sudden-deafness