Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome For traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post concussion syndrome (PCS).


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Old 08-03-2014, 02:52 PM #1
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TBI tinnitus can go away, mine is certainly less severe than it was after 5 months. When I eventually get normal sleep I reckon it will reduce more. The brain does heal it just takes time and I don't think anyone can tell you tinnitus is for life because we all heal at different rates.
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Old 08-03-2014, 09:47 PM #2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SuperElectric View Post
TBI tinnitus can go away, mine is certainly less severe than it was after 5 months. When I eventually get normal sleep I reckon it will reduce more. The brain does heal it just takes time and I don't think anyone can tell you tinnitus is for life because we all heal at different rates.
the brain does heal to a certain extent after an injury and to a lesser extent after several injuries so,etimes. In rare cases such as football players with many many injuries to the head happen over and over and over encephalopathy can set in and then the brain doesn't heal. But those are very rare cases, some have had tinnitus on this board for decades and I think it is safe to say that there is not going away.
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Old 08-04-2014, 06:33 PM #3
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Hi there, my MVA happened about 1 year ago and I had TBI-induced tinnitus. I have noticed in the past few months that it IS getting better. I also had hyperacusis which aggravated the tinnitus. As a result, I purchased musician's earplugs with a 15 and 25 filter. My son plays in a band and this way I can now go and see his perfomances (with the 25s). I use the 15s for crowded malls, restaurants, etc. Hope this helps. My hyperacusis has also improved over the past few months.
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Old 08-06-2014, 11:02 PM #4
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With Mark says the best thing to do it is try to ignore Tinnitus after a MBTI.

That said I have seen my fair share of ENT's here in NYC. Not to give you promising advice however 1 patient had hearing loss and horrible Tinnitus the first 6 months and fully recovered a year later. His hearing returned to normal and Tinnitus vanished. A rare yet true story.

Another well documented case as screen write Tom Sadyak who directed Liar Liar. His Tinnitus passéd around the 6 month mark as did NY Rangers All-Star Mark Staal at the 10 month mark. I think a good hall mark might be the 1 year mark. After then recovery is relatively unlikely or so i'm told.

A good start is to visit an ENT and document your hearing levels. I would STRONGLY recommend an Otoacoustic emissions test which measures your inner/outer hair cells. Tinnitus is usually directly correlated to damaged hair cells from the impact to your head.

As far as my own experience, i'm nearly 5 months post concussion and my Tinnitus is not as noticeable as it was in the beginning. The first 3 months can be awful.

Hope this information is of value. Best thing however is to try and not focus on it. Much easier said than done.
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Old 08-06-2014, 11:04 PM #5
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I also forgot to add that the following might be useful the first 6 months upon Tinnitus onset:

1. Cod liver oil 2x daily
2. Lots of raspberries, blackberries and blueberries
3. NAC pills 2x daily
4. Neurofeedback/BioFeedback
5. Light Exercise.

Mark has a good vitamin regimen which can address.
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Old 08-07-2014, 12:10 AM #6
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What's NAC pills ? I am taking a B12 supplement and cod liver oil capsule once a day, eating berries and getting lots of sleep..I don't have time for any exercise as I have to go to work and support a family and I have to make sure I get good sleep in the remaining time..my tinnitus is nowhere near to where it was in the first 2 months and has clearly improved but has not completely gone away..I am 5 months into this and although there is a possibility for it to go away I am not waiting for that to happen and instead letting habituation happen...I have to face a couple of road bumps everyday to and from my office and I wonder if they are contributing to my tinnitus in any way as I have some head sensitivity to those bumps..
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Old 08-07-2014, 06:48 AM #7
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the more sleep I get the better it is. but then it gets worse as the day goes on and so do I. but at 7 years nothing is going away that's here. that is hard to cope with.
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Old 08-07-2014, 07:21 PM #8
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Hi Martin82, what is: Neurofeedback/BioFeedback?
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1 year post-concussion caused by a high-speed MVA.
Driver to driver head-on. I was stationary and the other vehicle hit me traveling > 110 km/hr successfully breaking my sternum.
Diagnosed with chronic neuropathic pain, PTSD, somatic symptom disorder, depression, anxiety. I suffer from daily headaches, 24x7.
Meds: On prescription medication for neuropathic pain, breakthrough pain, anxiety, depression and sleep disorder.
OTC medications used to try and keep headaches in check: acetaminophen and ibuprofen.
Treatments: Physio (declined since May '14), RMT (declined since Feb '14), Psychiatry CBT (since Nov '13), Pain Clinic Nerve Blocks, Botox and Lidocaine Infusion (since May '14), SLP (since Aug '14), OT (since Sep '14).
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