Dave ~
I found this on the internet:
http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/content/163/4/327.full with a lot of related stories using this study as a basis for declaring that
'loud noises increase the risk of developing an acoustic neuroma'. Admittedly, I'm not a doctor or scientist but I'm skeptical that sound waves, even strong ones, affect the Schwann cells and cause an over-production of the myelin sheath covering the acoustic nerve which is eventually manifested as a tumor - a
vestibular schwannoma or, as we term it, an acoustic neuroma. Of course it's
possible and the study indicates a slightly increased risk of forming an acoustic neuroma if exposed to loud noises over a long period of time, as you indicate you were. However, the report concludes that 'more study is necessary'. This is a phrase that studies purporting to have found a tenuous link between cell phone use and developing an acoustic neuroma always conclude with, too. I think it's code for
"we really aren't sure". However, I would guess that your hearing loss and tinnitus can be far more easily attributed to your 13-year exposure to loud noise.
Jim