This year I have used my noise cancelling Bose headset every time I cut my lawn with my riding mower. And I had been using them at work at my desk. Suddenly, a few weeks ago I got tinnitus in my right ear. Has not gone away. I don't turn up the volume except when cutting the lawn.
I'm wondering if there is a population of people with Tinnitus whose first onset was following the use of noise cancelling headphones. Naturally, this would be a difficult correlation to establish, but the web provides a potential medium for ferreting out such a cause / effect through a statistically significant common experience.
I expect many will find the question rather odd, but the signal processing techniques used in these noise cancelling headphones are not perfect and I am wondering if they might mess with auditory nerve responses or subject ears to some kind of undue pressure.
This is, of course, total conjecture at this stage. I want to use my headphone, but when I switch them on I notice a certain kind of pressure and it led to my wondering....
Thank you,
HiFreq
I'm wondering if there is a population of people with Tinnitus whose first onset was following the use of noise cancelling headphones. Naturally, this would be a difficult correlation to establish, but the web provides a potential medium for ferreting out such a cause / effect through a statistically significant common experience.
I expect many will find the question rather odd, but the signal processing techniques used in these noise cancelling headphones are not perfect and I am wondering if they might mess with auditory nerve responses or subject ears to some kind of undue pressure.
This is, of course, total conjecture at this stage. I want to use my headphone, but when I switch them on I notice a certain kind of pressure and it led to my wondering....
Thank you,
HiFreq
Member
if they would be ok to use at work (I work in noisy office but am on sick leave now). Reading this thread made me decide not to.