From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy

   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy #1  

RSKY

Elite Member
Joined
Oct 5, 2003
Messages
2,759
Location
Kentucky, West of the Lakes, South of Possum Trot.
Tractor
Kioti CK20S
A report for those of you who have humored me during my depressing series of posts and rants about my ear problems. I had a doctor's appointment in Memphis yesterday for a checkup. Let me recap what has happened to me. This might help somebody else having a similar problem.

August 10th I had an 'episode' at church that led two very experienced RNs to think I was having a heart attack. Fed me nitro pills and had me transported to a local hospital. Spent two days there having all sorts of tests ran. Had a couple more episodes over the next week so bad I couldn't even crawl to the bathroom to throw up. Heart problems were ruled out and I got an appointment at the Shea Ear Clinic in Memphis where I was being treated for hearing loss in my right ear. Dr Shea diagnosed a recurrence of Ménière's disease which I was treated for thirty years ago. He treated me with a "Profusion" in the right inner ear. Which means they put me to sleep and stuck a needle thru my eardrum and injected a drug to "permanently numb" the nerves from the balance portion of my ear to my brain. When we went back for a six week checkup I was very discouraged to the point of depression. Couldn't walk thru my house without bouncing off the walls and running into door facings. Did a lot of falling and staggering around due to constant dizziness and vertigo. My hearing in my right ear was declining and I couldn't wear my hearing aids because they seemed to trigger a round of vertigo. To my shock and surprise the doctor was ecstatic about my problems and by the time I finished describing what was happening with my wife filling in more details he had a big smile of his face. Said the problems I was having meant that the process was working!! Gee, thanks for telling me Doc!!

About three to four weeks ago I hit a low point. The dizziness was nearly constant. Even sitting still my balance was off. It was never bad, just constant. When trying to go right I would sometimes stagger to the left and did not trust myself to stand up and start walking without a few seconds to stabilize. Had to have a hand out to balance myself all the time. Had to have night lights because I had no balance in the dark. And I had lost nearly all the hearing in my right ear.

Slowly, over the past three weeks things started to improve. I am not staggering, not walking into walls, can walk in a straight line. And my hearing in my right ear has improved. The hearing tests yesterday showed my hearing better than my first appointment last year. From nearly deaf to improved hearing in three weeks! The good doctor was very pleased with the results and was smiling from ear to ear. And after three months of not driving I actually drove out of Memphis and part of the three hour trip home. I am at about 90% or higher being back to as normal as I usually am.

The only problem I was warned about is that I have to be conscious of weather fronts. A sudden drop in barometric pressure can trigger a resurgence of symptoms. This too will gradually fade away over time.

So, in conclusion to my overly long post, I am back to as close to normal as I have ever been. My poor Ford pickup hasn't been driven in close to two months and it is feeling neglected. I have places to go and people to see. And I wish joy and happiness to all who are reading this.

RSKY

P.S. If you or somebody you know is having ear or balance problems I highly recommend the Shea Clinic in Memphis Tennessee. Clinic was started in 1926 and the doctor I am seeing is the great grandson of the founder and it is one of the top clinics in the world for ear problems.
 
   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy #2  
Sister in law had a similar incident about two months ago. Dizzy, light headed, vertigo, etc. An urgent care visit turned into an emergency room visit that turned into a 4 day hospital stay. The doctors thought she had a stroke. Had her on several IV meds including blood thinners. 2+ days in a neurologist takes a look - shingles in the right ear..... 6 weeks later she still has a little vertigo at times and her doctor says it might be a year before she's back to 100%.
 
   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy #3  
Wow, that is truly great news, so glad for you!
 
   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy #4  
Glad to see you are doing better. I know you described some of the exercises you were doing. Do you have to keep those up.
 
   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy #5  
@RSKY I'm glad to hear that you are on the mend. Congratulations!
All the best, Peter
 
   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy #6  
Glad to hear that you are doing better.
 
   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy #7  
Having gone through a year with pretty bad vertigo, I can sympathize with you. It wasn't constant, but would come on with no warning and all I could do was to set in a chair and stay still or I would get sick to my stomach. I had lost most of the hearing in my left ear ten years before the vertigo started. I saw an audiologist then, and he wanted to inject my left ear with something to stop it from messing up my balance, but that would have killed what residual hearing I had in that ear, and I declined. I still have a constant ringing and white noise in that ear, and occasionally sounds of a certain pitch and volume come through.
Glad to hear you're getting back to normal.
 
   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Glad to see you are doing better. I know you described some of the exercises you were doing. Do you have to keep those up.

Well....I have been banned from some of those exercises by SWMBO. Seems my fifty steps with my eyes open then 'see how far your stupid a$$ can walk with your eyes closed before you run off the road' backfired on me. Saturday morning I was about a quarter mile from the house and made forty steps with my eyes shut before stepping off the road. Then walked fifty steps with them open and my next try with eyes closed was going well until I stepped halfway off the edge of the pavement and twisted my ankle. Stood there for a few minutes and thought I could walk it off. Made it about ten steps and realized I had a bad problem. Hobbled back towards the house and couldn't go any farther. Had to call my wife to come get me. So, still in her pajamas, she had to drive a quarter mile to pick me up. Saying she was not happy is like saying water is wet. I bet I heard, "I told you not to do that", and "that just wasn't very smart", and some other phrases women use on us men when we don't quite live up to their expectations. I was hurting so I just agreed with her. Monday she specifically told the doctor that I would not be doing that exercise any more. I started to say that walking with my eyes closed did more good than any other exercise but one look at her and I shut up.

So it is three days since I twisted, sprained, or what ever I did to the ankle. It doesn't hurt that much until I put weight on it, move is a little bit, or let it remain still and stiffen up. Hopefully in a couple more days it will be healed and I really hope it will be forgotten.

I am allowed to do the exercises where I sit in a chair and without moving my head look up, then down, then up, then down for twenty times slowly the twenty times fast. Some comment about not getting hurt doing that was made but I ignored it.

RSKY
 
   / From Gloom and Doom to Cheerful and Happy
  • Thread Starter
#9  
Having gone through a year with pretty bad vertigo, I can sympathize with you. It wasn't constant, but would come on with no warning and all I could do was to set in a chair and stay still or I would get sick to my stomach. I had lost most of the hearing in my left ear ten years before the vertigo started. I saw an audiologist then, and he wanted to inject my left ear with something to stop it from messing up my balance, but that would have killed what residual hearing I had in that ear, and I declined. I still have a constant ringing and white noise in that ear, and occasionally sounds of a certain pitch and volume come through.
Glad to hear you're getting back to normal.

The doctor I am seeing said he uses about a third of the drug that other doctors use. Told me that it might take three procedures a couple months apart but it only took one. At this checkup, twelve weeks since the profusion, my hearing has improved to the point it is better than it was in May 2024 on my second visit. Three to four weeks ago I was virtually deaf in my right ear. I have started wearing my hearing aids again and had to reset the right one and turn the volume down. And the constant roaring noise has disappeared.

Good luck with your problem. I hope you can find a solution.

RSKY
 

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