[abc15.com]
J&J vaccine recipients have noticed an increase in tinnitus. I had Moderna, and didn't get an increase in tinnitus, but has anyone who got J&J noticed this?
Aspirin ingestion is a leading cause of this!!!!!!
I have a friend who has made the same complaint, although I don't know if it was J&J or another vaccine. However, he is a Trumper and waited until late last year to get the vaccine. Even though he is a scientist, he leans in the direction of all the anti-vax propaganda.
He had only gotten one vaccination before contracting Covid from a Super Bowl Party last month, and getting a severe sore throat and fever for several days.
You may well be one of the unlucky few who suffered negative side effects. I hope you recover. I've had varying levels of tinnitus for years and it's no fun.
I didn't get tinnitus from a vaccine, luckily. I've had it for many years, and I think it was due to going to too many rock concerts (and playing in too many bands). I just saw this and wondered if anyone had noticed this. I did get a temporary increase in tinnitus from a medication last year, but it went away. Your friend's tinnitus may have come from COVID, or maybe a medication. NSAIDS can do it too.
I got the Moderna but already had this issue before. It's not too bad and sometime it is almost quiet (but sometimes not). So if there is a medical connection perhaps there can be a way to quiet it through a drug. People's Pharmacy has written sometimes lemon juice helps. Here's a link and I do find the calmer I am the quieter it is. [peoplespharmacy.com]
Thanks for the link. I am plagued by this as well, but so far, still have normal hearing. It can be influenced by substances. I once took a glaucoma eye drop which made my tinnitus 100 X worse. Unbearable! I couldn't sleep; it was awful. Discontinuing the drop made it go back to its original level, which I hardly notice. I'll try lemon juice. I wonder if lime juice works; I add that to my water a lot.
@Organist1 I have heard there can be several causes and too much ear wax is one. It must be horrible for a musician.
@JackPedigo I barely notice it normally, and think it came from listening to loud music for too long.
@Organist1 It is said as we age frequencies in the high range start to drop out. I had a hearing test and that was the case. In our brains are receptors that respond to the different frequencies and when the sound is not there the receptors try to create one, sort of like the missing limb pain. I tried looking for some cure and there is an experimental one that tries to find the specific frequency affected and then use a transducer to recreate that frequency. Like you, sometimes it's very low but most of the time louder.
[mayoclinic.org]
[ata.org]