Hello all, my name is Scott. I woke up the day after Christmas 2020 with ringing in my left ear. I didn't give it too much thought and just figured it would pass. Days and days go by and it doesn't pass and seems to alternate between high pitched ringing and loud hissing. Fast forward a couple of weeks and I have a hearing test done. My ears look fine and there's no sign of hearing loss. The ENT shoves a scope through my sinuses and sees some inflammation way in the back. She prescribes flonase and acid reflux meds. No change.
I spoke to my primary care doctor because a pill he gave me to sleep a couple of months before was listed as ototoxic. My dose was low and I had only been on it a short time, but I stopped to see if it would help. It didn't. We've tried muscle relaxers and antibiotics, and I've also tried loads of supplements and decongestants. Still nothing. Saw a neurologist and am scheduled for an MRI this week. I've avoided NSAID because of possible side effects, and then I've tried taking some for inflammation. Nothing seems to be a sure fire fix.
Here's where it stands. The issue is mainly in the left ear. It's never gone but varies throughout the day. It can be a relatively faint fluctuating sound like coins jingling or broken glass, and then can become an extremely loud hiss. After the first couple of weeks it started moving into my right ear but that is a more solid sound at a different frequency, and usually only happens when I'm physically active. Once I relax it moves back to the left ear. It seems to be worse in the evenings.
When the left ear is relatively quiet, it is irritated by sound. If I try to listen to low music the hiss in the ear increases with the volume, and when I turn off the music the ear is fairly quiet with just a faint jingling. Then later the hissing will kick up again.
So I'm absolutely confused why this started out of the blue, was strictly in my left ear for the first couple of weeks, and now wanders to the right ear when I'm active. Nothing is stable about it, it changes multiple times throughout the day and it's absolutely maddening. From what I've read on tinnitus, this does not sound like a standard pattern at all. Anyone have any idea? I'm going to call my doc on Monday and ask for loads of bloodwork to look for inflammation, infection or something else.
I spoke to my primary care doctor because a pill he gave me to sleep a couple of months before was listed as ototoxic. My dose was low and I had only been on it a short time, but I stopped to see if it would help. It didn't. We've tried muscle relaxers and antibiotics, and I've also tried loads of supplements and decongestants. Still nothing. Saw a neurologist and am scheduled for an MRI this week. I've avoided NSAID because of possible side effects, and then I've tried taking some for inflammation. Nothing seems to be a sure fire fix.
Here's where it stands. The issue is mainly in the left ear. It's never gone but varies throughout the day. It can be a relatively faint fluctuating sound like coins jingling or broken glass, and then can become an extremely loud hiss. After the first couple of weeks it started moving into my right ear but that is a more solid sound at a different frequency, and usually only happens when I'm physically active. Once I relax it moves back to the left ear. It seems to be worse in the evenings.
When the left ear is relatively quiet, it is irritated by sound. If I try to listen to low music the hiss in the ear increases with the volume, and when I turn off the music the ear is fairly quiet with just a faint jingling. Then later the hissing will kick up again.
So I'm absolutely confused why this started out of the blue, was strictly in my left ear for the first couple of weeks, and now wanders to the right ear when I'm active. Nothing is stable about it, it changes multiple times throughout the day and it's absolutely maddening. From what I've read on tinnitus, this does not sound like a standard pattern at all. Anyone have any idea? I'm going to call my doc on Monday and ask for loads of bloodwork to look for inflammation, infection or something else.