Firstly, may I apologise for using your forum to ask this question as AFAIK I do not have an AN (MRI without contrast was normal) but you were very helpful in the initial stages of my diagnosis, and I've not been able to find any answers anywhere else.
Following a severe attack of vertigo in early November 2013 (and several subsequent, less severe ones) I have unilateral sensorineural hearing loss in my right ear, tinnitus and impaired balance. I have recently had a pure tone audiometry test, which shows mild hearing loss in the low frequencies, moderate in the middle frequencies and severe hearing loss in the high frequencies in my affected ear (the left ear still has excellent hearing). I have been given a diagnosis of probable Meniere's disease by the ENT consultant, but I am concerned that some of my symptoms don't seem to fit. All the information I can find on Meniere's disease mentions fluctuating, low frequency hearing loss. My hearing does not fluctuate (although it is much harder to hear in noisy environments than in quiet ones, I don't think anything actually changes in my ear, although noisy environments do make me dizzy so maybe it does), it deteriorated rapidly to this level and has remained like it. Of course, the hearing loss is also not primarily in the low frequencies!
Has anyone come across a diagnosis in their own search for information that seems more appropriate? I am obviously keen for the correct diagnosis, and one of a curable condition would be infinitely preferable rather than the limbo of a chronic, incurable illness.
I am booked in for a repeat hearing test in six months' time at which point I will question the ENT about it (I did not read the report of the hearing test at the time, I only happened to see it because I needed a letter from my GP detailing my symptoms) but in the mean time I am doing my own research. I am in the UK, so have to work within the timeframe and limitations of the NHS (no disrespect to them, they are free after all!)
Many thanks for any help you can offer.