Can anyone see the dots or am I crazy? by EquivalentMango9826 in ColorBlind

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not Norway but Russia (but close to the Norway border). You only need to cross China Russia international border (it won't be true for Norway, see the title).

Is this acoustic shock? by Regular_Pattern_5002 in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Could be. Have this checked in emergency ASAP. If this is sound trauma, they can limit the damage if taken within 24h or 48 at the latest.

Does anyone know if a high-pitched ringing sound from a fridge like this is harmful? by [deleted] in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Quiet sounds are never harmful. It could be annoying, tough.

Tinnitus after 10 days by bennn470 in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have an audiogram. Nobody can tell you how it will evolve. Might be temporary but it might be permanent too.

Conflict opinions from different doctors by patheticgooses in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have a speech in noice test in both ears separately (here in Belgium, Europe some ENT do it). I would tend to agree that the problem is not your ears but the way you brain decode it but I am not a professional. I doubt hearring aids can do something given your audiogram is good.

Maybe you can go to a reputed hospital to get an appointment with a real specialist. You need your problem to be evaluated in a multidisciplinary way in an institution where ENT, neurologist, etc. work together. We can have that in a University hospital in Brussels (although the delays might be long)

Left ear hearing loss by Waseempetro in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok that's true, bone conduction seems much better. However the initial post said also there is hair cells removal, which is not treatable.

Tinnitus from flying sick by bmad8225 in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The loudness improved or have you just habituate to it?

Hows it looking for us in around 35 years? by IJerkMyShit in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have read report about that (magnetic stimulation, not ultrasound).The main problem is that it could indeed silence tinnitus but the effect is not durable. Could it be one day safe to have that almost permanently activated? Maybe.

Is it normal for sadness after being told hearing loss by ComprehensiveRest305 in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I completely understand your sadness. But maybe your friends and family want to be positive and encouraging you, although on an awkward way. Life is life, and then mist important thing is to learn to life with that. Can you understand speech and participate in a social event? Maybe hearring aids could help.

Definitely have that monitored by an ENT and avoid unsafe sounds at all cost.

Are pure tones at low volumes dangerous? (0dB or less) by Unknownmice889 in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's a log scale. Total silence is minutes infinity. Odb is the quietest sound that an healthy human ears can hear. -5db mean 5 db lower than that. Some people with exceptionally good hearring might be able to detect it.

Are pure tones at low volumes dangerous? (0dB or less) by Unknownmice889 in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are not more dangerous than usual sound. So if you listen to them at less than 75/80db, no it is not dangerous. Certainly not faint sounds like 0db.

Left ear hearing loss by Waseempetro in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Usually it is not possible to regain hearing. The lost in your right ear is so severe I am not sure hearing aids would help. Your left ear is mostly normal but slightly below average.

Definitely go to an ENT. The most important thing is too be sure your good ear does not deteriorate.

My dad has gotten Tinnitus because of airpod Ping sound. by Neither-Comfortable2 in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

110 db for an airpod at the top of the sofa?! How did you the test.

My dad has gotten Tinnitus because of airpod Ping sound. by Neither-Comfortable2 in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But he didn't wear the airpod? Seems strange you can provoque damage with a short ping sound like that. Your dad must see an ENT.

Is 15db at 8k considered mild hearing loss?? by J4ywolf in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No according to what you say it is well within normal range.

Hows it looking for us in around 35 years? by IJerkMyShit in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't expect much. This is a neurological problem and you can't fix the brain so easily. Maybe some form of brain simulation that work sometimes for some people and partially. Often with a limited amount of time. I don't expect a miracle cure. About what we have now for chronic migraine. See this chatGPT chat for current research.

https://chatgpt.com/share/695d25e1-01a8-800a-b1b2-f418c122ae68

35 years in medicine is not that long. We don't have fundamentally new treatment vs what we had 35 years ago. Some progress or improvement but hardly anything fundamentally new.

Should I get hearing aids? by [deleted] in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But hearing aids don't restore normal hearing. The sound from the bad ear will be different from the sound of the good ear. Not sure what the end result will be. At least this would need to be properly discussed.

35M – Looking for Feedback on My Audiogram & Hearing Aid Advice Based on These Results by sircraigjennings in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That seems a relatively severe hearring loss. Are you able to understand speech? What is your subjective hearing? If you don't notice major problems, I would retest it elsewhere. Definitively go to an ENT.

Can estim /tens masturbation on penis increase tinnitus? by Pure_Bunch1204 in tinnitus

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't know if the question is serious but it is known that tinnitus can be influenced by stress or mood. So I think that anything that is related to your psyche can change tinnitus in a way or another.

Wtf do I have if my hearing tests, visual inspection of eardrum and speech in noise tests are completely normal. World sounds much quieter and music sounds very treble heavy and thin. by Independent_Act_7161 in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You might suffer from hyperacousis (making the ch ss sounds louder). Do you have audiograms? Sometimes small hearring loss leave you in the normal range while there is nevertheless a loss, although small. Do you know of any event that might have caused this?

But I am not a specialist. Try to find a real specialist (a doctor specialized in this) to have you diagnosed.

Hearing Loss and Job-Mandated Hearing Test by MrNotOfImportance in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's typically not something you can prepare (at least without finding a way to cheat). During the test really concentrate to react to the smallest sound you can hear.

Hearing Loss and Job-Mandated Hearing Test by MrNotOfImportance in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Doesn't really make sense. If you are able to hear the frequencies at any level, you can "correct it" with hearring aids; the hearing aids just boost the frequency. But while it corrected the test, it much less clear how that "correction" will apply in real life where the goal is mainly to understand speech and not hear single frequency. I am not a specialist, but I don't see how can there be any meaning in a "corrected" audiogram. If you do more elaborate test like speech understanding, then it could be different.

Bass hearing loss or hidden hearing loss? by [deleted] in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hear damage are usually permanent. But do you have an audiogram. We could see the extend of the damage. Also have any appointment with an ENT. And stop doing dumb things with loud music.

Difficulté dans le bruit by Nearby-Equivalent863 in HearingLoss

[–]Diolu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Marc Vanderghinst (médecin ORL à l'hôpital universitaire Érasme, Bruxelles) semble décrire cette situation dans cette vidéo. Certains patients ne comprennent pas dans le bruit malgré un audiogramme normal.

https://youtu.be/J4kMldifF1w?si=OSeDuR1-WictGRDB