Hearing Loss: Come introduce yourself and connect with others

Welcome to the Hearing Loss group on Mayo Clinic Connect.
This is a welcoming, safe place where you can meet people living with hearing loss, and friends and family supporters. Whether you were born deaf or hard of hearing, experienced hearing loss after birth or with aging, it helps to connect with others. Together we can learn from each other, support one another and share stories about living with hearing loss, coping with challenges and celebrating milestones.

Let’s chat. Why not start by introducing yourself? What is your hearing loss experience? Got a question, tip or story to share?

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Hearing Loss Support Group.

@grovelander

I'm more confident of the need for CI surgery since meeting with my surgeon today. She says I'm an excellent candidate and should do well. I feel, as you so, that my menieres may be burned out since I haven't had vertigo for two years, but if I have an episode before the surgery date, she may need to destroy the balance center in my implanted ear so that there will be no vertigo afterwards . Time will tell on that issue.

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I hope that the fact you haven't had vertigo for two years is a positive sign that it has burned out. Do you plan to have the CI surgery soon?

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@joyces

Meniere's and balance, plus aging: I wouldn't have the balance center destroyed unless I had gone to a really good vestibular rehab center and honestly done VRT exercises, which you need to do for the rest of your life, EVERY DAY. I've had Meniere's most of my life, but it only became a serious problem in my 40s, after I quit taking birth control pills (i.e., hormones). After four years of searching for a safe combo of estrogen and progesterone, I quit having crises of several hours 2-3 times every week and was able to do rehab, which I did every day. Then, two years ago, I went bilateral. Initially, it only affected my hearing so that I was functionally nearly totally deaf, but after a few months I began having frequent crises, so I finally found a doc in this little town who was willing to prescribe large doses of hormones for someone 78. Within two weeks, my hearing in the newly-affected ear returned to the poor level it had been before going bilateral and I was able to wear my aid once again (less recruitment). The next step was to schedule a series of appts. at the Vestibular Center in Portland, Oregon, one of the best in the nation, for follow-up to regain stability. I learned a couple of new things to do, to counteract not only having gone bilateral, but to offset age-related loss of nerve sensitivity in my lower legs: I need to work hard to "listen" to what my feet tell me (proprioception). At 79, I am once again driving two hours each way, hiking/wading 7 miles along a wild river to collect data for our state fisheries agency--no cell reception for 20 miles. I also cross the lower mainstem (a real challenge) and do some serious scrambling every spring to place a temperature monitor above a waterfall, and then to check it midsummer and remove it before fall rains make that impossible. I wouldn't have done work in that wild watershed for the last 29 years if I hadn't learned to do VRT...every stinking day.

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My surgeon is considering deadening the balance center only because she feels I may be masking the vertigo with the prescription of valium my previous ENT recommended. I'm gradually decreasing the dosage to see what happens. If I don't get any vertigo she will leave it intact and conclude that I don't need the med. We'll see-- I'm not anxious to destroy anything if it's not absolutely necessary. I'm planing going to VRT post surgery because my balance is not great.
Thank you for your input. I admire your very active lifestyle. I, 74 and do a lot of walking but not to the extent you do. Good for you!

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@julieo4

I hope that the fact you haven't had vertigo for two years is a positive sign that it has burned out. Do you plan to have the CI surgery soon?

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i'm also hoping that the meniere's has burned out, at least to the point where vertigo is no longer a big problem. My surgery is scheduled for October 4th. I had a 2-hour series of balance tests yesterday(to establish a baseline assessment) and had very little dizziness which the audiologist said was a good sign for success with the CI. Trying to not get my expectations too high-- rather to be pleasantly surprised than disappointed with the outcome.

So glad I heard about this website-- very helpful to hear from others about their hearing loss, and treatments. Thank you!

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I've never been able to benefit from any of the drugs like Valium: while they make me fuzzy-headed, they do zip for the vomiting crises. It's no longer a secret that many women past their mid-40s can avoid serious vertigo and deafness by taking hormones. I'm pretty positive that I went bilateral because, over the more than 30 years after starting big hormones doses I had cut back to a tiny dose. I'm now taking less than half the dosage it took to get some hearing and balance back, less much of the recruitment and distortion, and I plan to cut what I'm taking now in half over the next several months, then stay at that level. Properly balanced, hormones don't cause cancer.
If you balance center is deadened, you will have to do VRT to compensate. Seems much better to me to use any residual balance function with VRT, as it gives you an advantage.
I also volunteer for Backpacks for Kids, which means driving over a hundred miles each way to pick up 400-500 loaves of donated bread every other week. That means I'm lifting around 800 pounds several times to pick bread off the trays and pack it into totes, load the totes into a van, and stack them in the van. Then, back in town, I unload it all and pack it into freezers. The other days of the week, I deliver bread to various local charities. All that lifting means that my bones are exceptionally strong, so it IS worth something! It also meant that I didn't need to call for appts. for Covid shots, as the local nurse in charge of clinics here is also one of the four of us who've kept Backpacks running the past year. All I had to do was stop stuffing freezers long enough to sit down so that she could give me a shot, which was an extra dose, delivered to her at our pantry. Slick!
VRT really works, both in overall balance and in eye-hand coordination. One thing you need to do is to walk in safe low-light conditions. I always turn out all the lights in the house at night and walk around. I also often walk around our hilly meadow or along our gravel road: no street lights here, no ambient light. Walking in low light situations makes you pay attention to proprioception: using vision is automatic when your inner ear doesn't provide balance info, but it's bad because you lose your focal point every time you move your head or drive around a sharp curve. Learning to use proprioception (your third balance system) really frees you up, makes you stable and confident.

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I am writing with the exact same email address and name as I did six months ago. Are you a newer leader? What happened to my previous posts and the leader’s previous answers????? I had been writing from Arizona and am now in the Seattle WA area.

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@grovelander

i'm also hoping that the meniere's has burned out, at least to the point where vertigo is no longer a big problem. My surgery is scheduled for October 4th. I had a 2-hour series of balance tests yesterday(to establish a baseline assessment) and had very little dizziness which the audiologist said was a good sign for success with the CI. Trying to not get my expectations too high-- rather to be pleasantly surprised than disappointed with the outcome.

So glad I heard about this website-- very helpful to hear from others about their hearing loss, and treatments. Thank you!

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So happy to know you find this site helpful.

Peer support is a big plus. Learning that I was not alone with my hearing loss helped me a great deal. I encourage you to check out The Hearing Loss Assn. of America at their website. http://www.hearingloss.org There is a lot of information there. It's possible there might be a chapter of HLAA in your area. Most HLAA chapters have members with cochlear implants.

You will probably have to make a decision on which brand of CI you will be implanted with. They are all good, but there are some differences. Again, it helps to talk to others at the 'consumer' level.

I will be interested to hear more.

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@coppermoon

I am writing with the exact same email address and name as I did six months ago. Are you a newer leader? What happened to my previous posts and the leader’s previous answers????? I had been writing from Arizona and am now in the Seattle WA area.

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@coppermoon hello. If you would like to review your previous posts, you can log into the website, go to "Profile & Settings" by clicking on your username/handle (i.e. @coppermoon), then "Comments" to view your previously posted activity.

Does this help?

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@jpj

You need to see an ENT as soon as possible.

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I did intend to see the ENT and yet have to go through the protocols of another hearing test, regimen of prednisone then another visit to the PA then an MRI and only then do I see the ENT. Seems to delay things if you ask me - but nobody did.

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So sorry to hear about this delay. It is out of order. Speaking from experience, this is very serious. Action Plan should be : (1) See ENT immediately; (2) Start oral steroid pills immediately after receiving steroid prescription from ENT; (3) Begin series of 3 to four injections of steroids into middle ear if hearing is not improved by oral steroids within a week; (4) Obtain MRI.

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Also, continue to avoid loud environments and do not add sodium (salt) to your food.

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