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Does sound sensitivity go away?

Gay Ferry
Gay Ferry
2025-06-27 23:11:38
Count answers: 10
Symptoms may intensify if you feel stressed or tired or if you anticipate having to interact in spaces that you fear will be unpleasantly loud. Still, there isn’t a single cause that explains all cases of hyperacusis. Instead, it’s associated with multiple possible contributing factors and conditions. Contributing factors include: Long-term exposure to loud noises: Hyperacusis is more common in people exposed to loud music for long periods, like rock musicians, or who work in loud settings, like construction workers. Sudden exposure to loud noise: Some people with hyperacusis develop it after hearing a sudden, loud noise, like a gunshot or fireworks. Hyperacusis often accompanies conditions like tinnitus (up to 86% of people) and Williams syndrome (as many as 90% of people). Nearly half of the people diagnosed with hyperacusis also have a behavioral health condition, like anxiety. Conditions associated with hyperacusis include: Some people develop hyperacusis symptoms following surgery or as a reaction to a medication.
Vita Adams
Vita Adams
2025-06-20 03:53:01
Count answers: 13
In some cases, like with injuries to your brain or ear, the sound sensitivity might get better on its own. Treatment will depend on what caused it. You'll work with a specialist who’ll help you learn to deal with sound. You'll listen to very quiet noises for a certain period every day and build up gradually to louder sounds. Most of the time, you’ll wear a device on your affected ear or on both ears. It can take 6 months to a year or more to get the full benefit of the therapy. While these can give you short-term relief, they can, over the long term, make your symptoms worse.
Palma Conroy
Palma Conroy
2025-06-20 02:56:46
Count answers: 11
Experts don’t know what causes misophonia. However, they suspect it may be a combination of factors. Some of these suspected factors include brain structure differences, other conditions, family history or genetics. Research shows that people with misophonia are more likely to have certain differences in their brain structure and activity. Misophonia is much like turning on a radio left at maximum volume. The sudden intense noise makes you react instinctively to make the sound stop. Likewise, misophonia can instinctively send you into fight-or-flight mode. There’s evidence that misophonia might be a condition that runs in families. There’s also at least one genetic mutation that experts think plays a role.