My symptoms:
1. Low-pitched roaring/humming sound, like the sound you get in your ears when you yawn deeply. Sometimes this is accompanied by a higher-pitched ringing, although it's not generally that loud and doesn't last that long. The roaring/humming is constant, at least when I have symptoms.
2. No vertigo. No dizziness.
3. Seems like I have some hearing loss in right ear. Fullness comes and goes.
4. Eyelid fluttering from time to time.
5. Sore right jaw. It clicks when I open it wide and then close.
6. Is it called hyperacusis when sounds make the roaring in one's ear louder? Perhaps it's just an offshoot of the tinnitus.
7. Symptoms are generally worst first thing in the morning, when I get out of bed, and calm slightly throughout the day, to the point where, come evening, I think it might finally be subsiding. Then I go to bed and, when I get up the next morning, the roaring and sensitivity is back in full vigour.
I had similar symptoms in the winter of 2001/02, and remember having it several times through the years, including in the summer of 2010. Have had symptoms three separate times since Labour Day, with breaks in between:
Aug 28, 2013, to Sep 8, 2013 (12 days)
Oct 13, 2013, to Oct 23, 2013 (11 days)
Nov 5, 2013, to Ongoing (November 14)
The internet of course is full of horror stories about tumours and such. I do wish to get some idea of what the possibilities of my actually having a brain tumour are. I read somewhere that it affects 1 in 100,000 people, which here in Canada would mean I'm one of 350 people who will be diagnosed with acoustic neuroma this year. Seems a little far-fetched. But perhaps someone out there would have a better idea? Do my symptoms ring a bell for anyone? I'd very much like to know. I feel perfectly fine other than these very, very irritating symptoms. Really getting sick of plastering on a smile when I feel like yelling.
Thanks in advance for commenting.
Lord British
Possibilities:
Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction
Eustachian Tube Dysfunction
Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
Sinusitis and/or Allergies
Bacterial or Viral Infection
Acoustic Neuroma