Well I am finding this post VERY interesting
One question I asked at the symposium was,
“IF I get a baha would my hyperacusis become worse?â€No one had an answer… but perhaps Mike’s experience is providing one for me…
SO what is the difference between hyperacusis and tinnitus? Hmmmm…
Tinnitus is constant for me. No matter how quiet it is I can hear that solid constant high frequency ring.
Hyperacusis is an
over sensitivity to sound. For me certain sounds, in my case base sounds or low rumbles like air systems in buildings, make the sound perception in the
dead ear increase. Sometimes I use the parallel that it is like talking with a Microphone and you accidentally get in front of the speaker and get feedback. Tinnitus is constant (no matter what the sound around is) but hyperacusis is reactionary to noise.
The crumpling of a bag is a total killer… it makes a weird resonating sound in my deaf (100% dead) ear that hurts.
My husband's voice is a bass and his voice it painful for me to listen too- if I do not wear a filter in the good ear.
I am heading to an ENT today… I’ll let you know his opinions.
I am also getting an audiogram of the good ear to see what has changed since pre-surgery.
In this thread I am thinking that not enough is understood about hyperacusis. Even by specialists.
One audiologist told me (at the symposium) that it is somehow related to the cerebral cortex perception of sound.
I woke up with the hyperacusis with in the good ear, after my surgery. I am wondering if the e-stim to the facial nerve, that was performed during surgery- because the alarm bell went off when my surgeon nicked the facial nerve, may have sent some sort of shock to the good side’s nerves (#6 & #8)… perhaps involving the nerve that goes to the stapedius muscle on the good side. Only a “theoryâ€
of mine … I wish I had more than a theory to share but that is what I have at this point... like you I am searching for answers too...
DHM