BravoXray
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
- Messages
- 2,594
- Location
- Nothern Indiana
- Tractor
- Kubota BX2230, John Deere 430 Diesel
Reading all these posts makes me wonder just what percentage of people DON'T have problems with their sleep routines.
That said, from many years of operating heavy equipment with poor or no mufflers at all, more years of air tool and impact wrench operation, and more years of driving truck, I have had tinnitus in both ears for the last 35 years or so. Then in 2001, I awoke one morning a little dizzy, a loud whine/rushing sound and very little hearing in my left ear. The dizziness went away in a couple of days, and I got in to see my doctor about the same time. He didn't see any external problem, so he sent me for an MRI the next day. Nothing showed amiss in the MRI, and the audiologist said it was probably a case of spontaneous hearing loss. It sometimes happens and they don't know why it happens. A hearing test showed that what hearing I have left in my left ear shows a nearly normal frequency response, but greatly diminished, I'm functionally deaf in that ear.
So for the last 20 odd years, I have the annoying noise in my left ear, and tinnitus in the right. It's one of those things you get used to after a while, but it is annoying. Tinnitus aside, the hearing in my right ear is still pretty good, but when in a room with a lot of noise, it's really difficult to hear a person you are having a conversation with as the noise tends to drown out their voice.
I do go to sleep with either the radio or TV on with a sleep timer set, to help mask the noise in my head.
That said, from many years of operating heavy equipment with poor or no mufflers at all, more years of air tool and impact wrench operation, and more years of driving truck, I have had tinnitus in both ears for the last 35 years or so. Then in 2001, I awoke one morning a little dizzy, a loud whine/rushing sound and very little hearing in my left ear. The dizziness went away in a couple of days, and I got in to see my doctor about the same time. He didn't see any external problem, so he sent me for an MRI the next day. Nothing showed amiss in the MRI, and the audiologist said it was probably a case of spontaneous hearing loss. It sometimes happens and they don't know why it happens. A hearing test showed that what hearing I have left in my left ear shows a nearly normal frequency response, but greatly diminished, I'm functionally deaf in that ear.
So for the last 20 odd years, I have the annoying noise in my left ear, and tinnitus in the right. It's one of those things you get used to after a while, but it is annoying. Tinnitus aside, the hearing in my right ear is still pretty good, but when in a room with a lot of noise, it's really difficult to hear a person you are having a conversation with as the noise tends to drown out their voice.
I do go to sleep with either the radio or TV on with a sleep timer set, to help mask the noise in my head.