Hello!
I am 48 year old, generally healthy, physically fit, male newbie from Madison WI on this forum.
Here is my MRI case as of 01/11/2017:
Impression: 1. 4 x 3 mm enhancing nodule in the left internal auditory canal, intimate with 8th cranial nerve, consistent with an acoustic neuroma. 2. Otherwise normal MRI of the brain. |
I have had ear ringing for the last 5 years, on and off.
Attributed it to my few years worked as a factory worker without proper ear protections during my younger age.
The ringing became consistent during the last 1-2 years and this has been my new normal and I pretty much lived with it.
Hearing specialist told me it was pretty normal for my age and so I carried on.
Since about June 2016 I started having echo in my head, muffled hearing and uncomfortable internal head pressure.
It all started very abruptly. In fact, so abruptly that I rushed into ER to check my head for a possibly contusion issues (I coach kids in soccer and had a very hard "header" about 4 weeks prior). They did the CAT scan and found nothing fatally wrong with me and sent me home.
Shortly thereafter, the same hearing specialist checked me, prescribed a nasal steroid spray for my "allergy" that plugged my auditory canals into the middle ear and sent me home. (allergy - a typical conclusion they do now days for just about anything; I digress...)
Meanwhile nothing changed with my symptoms, and I started searching the web on my own and one of the immediate source was this forum.
I called my PCP for an appointment and reported on my web search results.
I did a good sales job and she scheduled me for MRI for the very next day.
So here I am.
Next appointment is on March 6 to see ENT specialist at UW hospital and we go from there.
Unsure what is next but what I have now is not really ideal case and something must change.
I have OK days and not so good days and just trying to carry on as usually the best I can (job, working out, family, thinking about the spring ahead - garden/bees/etc).
Meanwhile I will be reading this forum, searching more, and listening to advice.
Thanks for reading!