Profound deaf and musical tennitus, both sides along with the roaring, etc. All the time....hard to get to sleep, so I take short naps during the day....dunno if ear infections cause this, but I've suffereed with them for a very long time and have my ears cleaned/drained every 4-6 months, drops...and something new from the doctor last Friday.....no more ear plugs when I shower/bathe! He said the least little drop of water could cause infections, so he suggested putting vaseline into my ears, then plugging them up with cotton balls when I wash my hair! I started that today, and go back in a month to see if this will help....hoping it works!
I asked the doctor the same question....he said just "wipe it out"....along with the sides of ur hair around the ears (as vaseline is very oily).....Just take a cotton ball and rim it into the vaseline jar, stick it into ur ear(s)....or just take some vaseline onto ur fingertip, smooth it into ur ear canal and stick the cotton ball in....either way should work. Vaseline won't hurt ur ears.....I wash my hair 2-3 times a week (shower) and take baths on the other days, so it's not a daily thing.sorry - :topic:
How do you then clean the Vaseline out of your ears? I want to try this.
Actually tinnitus can affect born deaf people too. It is just the sound of a dying and damaged auditory nerve.
I asked the doctor the same question....he said just "wipe it out"....along with the sides of ur hair around the ears (as vaseline is very oily).....Just take a cotton ball and rim it into the vaseline jar, stick it into ur ear(s)....or just take some vaseline onto ur fingertip, smooth it into ur ear canal and stick the cotton ball in....either way should work. Vaseline won't hurt ur ears.....I wash my hair 2-3 times a week (shower) and take baths on the other days, so it's not a daily thing.
And another question, especially to Bottesini, who first introduced this idea: Do hearing people suffer from dying/ damaged auditory nerves? And if so, do they just suffer less because they are used to sound or can compensate with sound from different sources, e.g. loud music?
Not for nothing, but tinnitus is precisely the reason why someone could offer me the cure to my deafness and I would recoil in horror - I cherish the silence like an addiction.
I don't really know about hearing people. I would think if they have tinnitus, that would make them soon to be deaf or hard of hearing people.
Hi, everybody! I'm Antoinette, I'm new and while checking out the site I came across this treat. I cannot help to comment!
I am hard of hearing, for at least 40 years (probably a birth injury). Currently profoundly deaf for high frequencies ONLY. I get along "lip"-reading those sounds; sometimes without hearing aids to keep my performance sharp. But I have difficulty calling myself deaf and I find it difficult to mingle with people physically, even deaf people.
I wondered about the sun beetles I was hearing in class when I was 12 years old. Only many years later I learnt to call it tinnitis. Ever since discovering it is for keeps, I tried not to put emotions to it, even when it prevented me from hearing properly (I thought). I would not say I require sympathy for this constant companion. I know it is quiet when it is the only sound I hear. Wearing hearing aids makes it softer, or less noticible at least.
The audiologist one day told me that it is the way the remaining parts of the hearing system compensates for the lack of input they receive - to make up for the lost sound. Intriguingly, its frequency-contents is exactly that along the fast sloping part on my audiogram.
My theory thus: tinnitis is NOT dying nerve cells, but a sign of alive nerve cells hypersensitised to sound so that I can still try to hear those sounds! Even though it may take 110dB to start to hear it! And you cannot imagine how easily those real sounds can hurt. It is probably then also why these cells can get damaged from "volume", and eventually die. But it remains the sound of living nerve cells for me!
A common cause of tinnitus is inner ear cell damage. Tiny, delicate hairs in your inner ear move in relation to the pressure of sound waves. This triggers ear cells to release an electrical signal through a nerve from your ear (auditory nerve) to your brain. Your brain interprets these signals as sound. If the hairs inside your inner ear are bent or broken, they can "leak" random electrical impulses to your brain, causing tinnitus.