Skip to main content

Notice

Please note that most of the software linked on this forum is likely to be safe to use. If you are unsure, feel free to ask in the relevant topics, or send a private message to an administrator or moderator. To help curb the problems of false positives, or in the event that you do find actual malware, you can contribute through the article linked here.
Topic: -->to Dibrom (Read 15758 times) previous topic - next topic
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

-->to Dibrom

Hi Dibrom!
This is off topic, but since youre around here much i
figured this was a good place to try and contact you..

Can you tell me the exact name of that corticosteroid,
BC-A over at r3mix-forums talked about when hearing loss occurs
(LINK: http://www.audiofora.com/yabbse/index.php?...;threadid=3397)?
I was told from forum members overhere at hydrogen that
you knew about it and also talked about it awhile ago.

Its been well over 2 months since i had a damaging ear-
incident with my headphones (ouch & aaaaaaargh!) and couldnt
do anything practically about it (did'nt know what to do),
since the doctors wont give me any kind of support
unless i have 60-70% hearing loss they said!
What would mean i'd be needing hearing aids and everything
would be waaay too late for me by then anyways,
music is very important to me and the last two months
i had to do without, can you imagine ?
i dont ask you to,  anyway

i need some kind of suport,

NVI: My TNE appointment i made 1.5 months ago is not until mid
febraury only,
and they could only give me a hearing test.
If any damage has occured they can do nothing about it
except for telling me what to do to prevent further loss
they told me. I could've figured that out myself!
Why didnt i just severely broke my right leg
or something, that would've certainly healed !
mus ic will never be the ...... (sob sob sob..)

why does \'saving settings\' take about 3 minutes and my modem is working while shutting down my windows2000 ?

-->to Dibrom

Reply #1
Hey...

look at the bright side. Now you can download 128k cbr Xing rips all you want and not notice any difference.

More music choices!

-->to Dibrom

Reply #2
that's not very funny at all xterm....

i hope some people here can give you good answers about this morelli. untill then, google is always your friend ...
be well.

-->to Dibrom

Reply #3
Hi.

not funny at all was my first reaction too SK1,
google doesnt give me much feedback.
searching is a real B...,
certainly because its somthing medical.
theres a flood of info, nothing about corticoids
that are in medicine for ear-use.

to everyone who cares,
if your ears are prcious to you,

USE THOSE HEADPHONES WITH CARE!!
AND BE CAREFULL WITH AUDIO EDITORS
THAT PLAY FILES THAT DO NOT CONTAIN
AUDIO (IT HURTS!) !!
why does \'saving settings\' take about 3 minutes and my modem is working while shutting down my windows2000 ?

-->to Dibrom

Reply #4
MEDLINE is a medical scientific database. Google for "medline" and do a search there.
Let's suppose that rain washes out a picnic. Who is feeling negative? The rain? Or YOU? What's causing the negative feeling? The rain or your reaction? - Anthony De Mello

-->to Dibrom

Reply #5
If you do READ the mentioned forum, you will encouter a part that says something about people with damaged hearing being more sensitive to certain artifacts/frequencies than others. Seems their pychoacoustic curve is changed, and sometimes it may be compensated with flat eq calibration. Unfortunately it goes against lossy encoder common tricks, which are based in psychoacoustic models based from an average person hearing.

What was the name of that curve? I always forget...
She is waiting in the air

-->to Dibrom

Reply #6
Hi there Morelli

sorry about your Problem, since thiz sylvester (New Year 2003) a friend of me shoot a gun over my head and now i have a light tinitus in my ears, i know how it is, but with 60 - 70 percent of loss hearing .... ouu      ):


how is your tinitus ? have you one ? or is it so, that you hear the whole things quieter without the beeing of a tinitus in your ears ?

dont misunderstand my questions but i have to know, what i do to my ears if i go often to Discotheks. ( i go only in there with small ear-muffs, but anyway)

to your Questions: I have links for ear problems and a link where you can test (webbased) your hearing for yourself.

(i have read at a medicine site (i dont know where, a lot time is passed) that corticosteroid can favour the loss in hearing or it can help to heal.
depends on the person. so a 50/50% chance is there)


http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/druginf...pdi/202017.html          = a description of corticosteroid (its about ear infections an more)

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/        = i think there might be add. info on that corticosteroid.
http://www.earinfosite.org/                      = i think there might be add. info on that corticosteroid.
http://www.lhh.org/                                  = i think there might be add. info on that corticosteroid.

http://www.tinnituspage.org/                    = Something about Vitamin A = a alternative of corticosteroid i think



http://www.digital-recordings.com/hearing-.../ht_help_p.html      = The hearing test (requires Java runtime)

i hope the links will help a little


Here are my results (but i think my equipment is not good enought for this test so i dont know)

http://mcmdrabek.bei.t-online.de/Hoertest.jpg

as you can see my right ear is worse than the left and thats horrible for me bcause i can hear the diference everywhere.


I feel with you, wish you the best and hope you ears will be better soon
---TarX---

-->to Dibrom

Reply #7
This is a copy from the other `hearing loss' thread. I'm afraid to tell you that once your ear is damaged, it's permanent. The condition symptoms are (in this case) a constant `ringing' in the ear (especially at night and first thing in morning) and an `over sensitive' response to high frequency causing discomfort.

Example: that 16kHz from the television set `high voltage' horizontal deflection circuit will become apparent and bother you. If the condition is acute (like it just happened) your hearing could have a temporary `threshold shift' (like putting in an attenuator) as well.



Content from prior post:


The condition which musicians get from over-exposure is called Tinnitus (or tin ear):


Main Entry: tin·ni·tus 

Etymology: Latin, ringing, tinnitus, from tinnire to ring, of imitative origin

Date: 1843
: a sensation of noise (as a ringing or roaring) that is caused by a bodily condition (as a disturbance of the auditory nerve or wax in the ear) and can usually be heard only by the one affected.

-->to Dibrom

Reply #8
A Copy ???

i wrote it before three minutes
---TarX---

-->to Dibrom

Reply #9
Xterm, the posting rules don't allow me to fully express what I think of you and your post.

-->to Dibrom

Reply #10
Quote
Xterm, the posting rules don't allow me to fully express what I think of you and your post.

xterm is now out because of continuous trolling which continued despite of warnings.
Juha Laaksonheimo

-->to Dibrom

Reply #11
Xterm,

mod.rcmix active(delete_offending_content);

May you be gnawed on by teh squirrels! Evil is you!

Kind Regards,

Ruairi
rc55.com - nothing going on

-->to Dibrom

Reply #12
Hey why someone edited my post ?

"Here are my results (but i think my equipment is not good enought for this test so i dont know)"

!!Here was my Picture!!


is showing pictures not allowed here ?
---TarX---

-->to Dibrom

Reply #13
Quote
Hey why someone edited my post ?

"Here are my results (but i think my equipment is not good enought for this test so i dont know)"

!!Here was my Picture!!


is showing pictures not allowed here ?

I don't know who edited your post but yes: we do not like large pictures. A link should be used instead. Some people are still using dial-up.

-->to Dibrom

Reply #14
Tarx,

It wasnt me! - but feel free to link to your image, but please dont embed it!



Ruairi
rc55.com - nothing going on

-->to Dibrom

Reply #15
It was me. I just changed <IMG> to <URL>. It goes without saying that large images should only be linked to.

-->to Dibrom

Reply #16
ah ok  good to know

i was just wondering about it.
---TarX---

-->to Dibrom

Reply #17
Hi.
thanks for the extensive info and good links TarX!
i will start reading it all tomorrow..

and the rest  too!
thanks alot !
why does \'saving settings\' take about 3 minutes and my modem is working while shutting down my windows2000 ?

-->to Dibrom

Reply #18
scratch
meow

-->to Dibrom

Reply #19
Quote
scratch
meow


huh ?
why does \'saving settings\' take about 3 minutes and my modem is working while shutting down my windows2000 ?

-->to Dibrom

Reply #20
Hi, as I have already started, I am a medical doctor (altough not an ear specialist), I have asked my ear specialist buddies and they have come up with this:
The corticosteroid most used for acoustic trauma (damage to the ears due to loud sounds) is prednisone, 80 mg/day for ten days. More serious cases would need customized doses and SHOULD see an specialist.
Hope this is of any help.
I'm the one in the picture, sitting on a giant cabbage in Mexico, circa 1978.
Reseñas de Rock en Español: www.estadogeneral.com

-->to Dibrom

Reply #21
I forgot to mention...
Corticosteroids of any kind should not be used for long periods of time without expert advise and should not be stopped abruptly (there is a weaning period of decreasing doses).
In any case, the assistance of a health care professional is advised.
I'm the one in the picture, sitting on a giant cabbage in Mexico, circa 1978.
Reseñas de Rock en Español: www.estadogeneral.com

-->to Dibrom

Reply #22
Please correct me if this never happens, but anyways...  my friend - who i also trained as a soundguy he helped run a 108,000+ watt foh position - and he had his hearing "damaged" by a stupid gun close ot the head type of thing, totaly stupid to happen but hey sometimes people are (cough) drunkass crazy and stuff just goes off, whatcha going to do...

mabey it's a wax backup like what happened with ryan.  he went to the doctor and had one of those wax removal candles done on each ear, and instantly it was night and day for his, pretty cool.  stinking gross tho, fricken amazing amount of wax comes out of there man...  i saw it on learning channel too once    :x

worth asking your doc about  B)

-->to Dibrom

Reply #23
Quote
Hi, as I have already started, I am a medical doctor (altough not an ear specialist), I have asked my ear specialist buddies and they have come up with this:
.

i'm also a doctor, since i agree with the fact the one must go to ear specialist giving corticosteroides doses for people to use is not right since you should notice the corticosteroids are given in various way that depends on the pathologies and can not be generalized to everyone

so you must see a specialist of the ear that can fisrt diagnose the ear loss (frequencies) and the intensity of the disease , therefore a treatment can be given according to the tests that are made

old aged patients have sometimes secretions that blocks the sound to rich the inner ear

so: a good advice is to see a specialist of the ear

-->to Dibrom

Reply #24
i know this is off topic, but since your a doctor im wondering - what did you think of bush's address (if you watched it) when he talked about healthcare??  just talk or do you think he and congress will actually umm... do something??