<p>The suicide of Kent Taylor, the founder and chief executive of the Texas Roadhouse restaurant chain, has drawn attention to a possible link between Covid-19 and tinnitus, the medical term for a constant ringing in the ears.</p>.<p>Taylor suffered from a variety of symptoms following his illness, including severe tinnitus, his family said in a statement, adding that his suffering had become “unbearable.”</p>.<p>Whether tinnitus is linked to Covid-19 — and, if so, how often it occurs — is an unanswered question. Neither the World Health Organization nor the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention describes tinnitus as a symptom, although auditory problems are common in other viral infections.</p>.<p>But tinnitus is on the list of symptoms of long Covid published by the United Kingdom’s National Health Service, along with fatigue, shortness of breath, dizziness and more. And a few recent case reports and studies have hinted at a potential link.</p>.<p>A study published Monday in the Journal of International Audiology that looked at nearly 60 case reports and studies found that 15 per cent of adults with Covid-19 reported symptoms of tinnitus. The authors believe that the respondents were describing either a new condition or a worsening one, although they are following up with the 60 or so researchers to be certain about how the surveys were worded.</p>.<p>“In the 24 hours since we published, I’ve received about 100 emails,” said Kevin Munro, a professor of audiology at the University of Manchester and a co-author of the study. “Almost of all of them were people saying, ‘I was so happy to read about this, because my doctor thought I was crazy when I mentioned tinnitus and now I know I’m not the only one.’”</p>.<p>There is also some evidence that Covid-19 can aggravate symptoms among people who had tinnitus before they contracted the disease. A study published late last year in the journal Frontiers in Public Health surveyed 3,100 people with tinnitus and found that 40 per cent of the 237 respondents who had contracted Covid-19 reported that their symptoms were “significantly exacerbated” following the infection.</p>.<p>“There are a lot of viruses that have an impact on the ears, including measles, mumps and rubella,” said Dr. Eldre Beukes, the audiologist at Anglia Ruskin University in England who led the study. “It could also be the case that medication taken to combat Covid is making tinnitus worse. And there is a well-known link between tinnitus and stress.”</p>.<p>The study cited a variety of factors that have increased stress for nearly everyone in the pandemic, including fear of catching the coronavirus, and social distancing rules that have increased isolation and loneliness.</p>.<p>Home-schooling has also raised stress levels, as has greater consumption of coffee and alcohol, Beukes added.</p>.<p>Covid-19 has complicated life for tinnitus sufferers even if they have not contracted the virus, said Kim Weller, an IT specialist who lives in Houston and is part of a tinnitus support group based there.</p>.<p>“There’s a gentleman in Ohio who I text and talk on the phone with and I’d describe him as being at the end of his rope,” she said. “He’s not working, trouble sleeping, living alone. His situation is definitely worse because of Covid, because he’s just so isolated.”</p>.<p>Exactly why tinnitus affects certain people is a bit of a mystery. There are roughly 200 causes of the condition, including exposure to loud noises, stress, hearing loss and perforated eardrums. There is currently no cure. Patients are often treated with cognitive behavioral therapy — essentially, talk therapy designed to rewire thoughts and behaviors — or coached on how to habituate themselves to the condition.</p>.<p>The CDC found in a 2011-12 survey — the most recent data available — that 15 per cent of respondents said they had suffered some kind of tinnitus. Of them, 26 per cent said it was constant or near constant ringing, and 30 per cent described the condition as a “moderate” or “very big” problem in their lives.</p>.<p>A very small group of people in Beukes’ study — seven — reported that Covid-19 brought on tinnitus for the first time. Just over half of people with tinnitus said the illness had left their symptoms unchanged.</p>.<p>Curiously, 6 per cent said they were less bothered by tinnitus after contracting the disease. Beukes speculates that for these people, a life-threatening condition had the effect of reframing the noise in their head.</p>.<p>“Contracting Covid meant that in some cases they were struggling to survive, and that left them with a very different perspective,” she said.</p>.<p>The roughly 40 per cent of respondents who said that Covid-19 made their tinnitus worse includes people like Aisling Starrs of Derry, in Northern Ireland. She’d coped with hearing loss in her right ear her entire life. Two years ago, she gave birth to a daughter and within minutes noticed a buzzing in both ears that did not abate.</p>.<p>“Then in September I got Covid, and it went straight for my ears,” said Starrs, who is an occupational therapist. “On a scale of one to 10, it was a three before Covid. Since then, it’s been a seven.”</p>.<p>She had no idea that exacerbated tinnitus might be a Covid-related problem until she learned otherwise on the website of the British Tinnitus Association, a co-sponsor of the Anglia Ruskin study.</p>.<p>“I thought, ‘Thank God’ when I realized I wasn’t the only one out there,” she said. “I’ve met people through my work who don’t realize that there’s a medical term for the ringing in their ears. Just knowing that other people have the same condition is an enormous relief.”</p>
<p>The suicide of Kent Taylor, the founder and chief executive of the Texas Roadhouse restaurant chain, has drawn attention to a possible link between Covid-19 and tinnitus, the medical term for a constant ringing in the ears.</p>.<p>Taylor suffered from a variety of symptoms following his illness, including severe tinnitus, his family said in a statement, adding that his suffering had become “unbearable.”</p>.<p>Whether tinnitus is linked to Covid-19 — and, if so, how often it occurs — is an unanswered question. Neither the World Health Organization nor the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention describes tinnitus as a symptom, although auditory problems are common in other viral infections.</p>.<p>But tinnitus is on the list of symptoms of long Covid published by the United Kingdom’s National Health Service, along with fatigue, shortness of breath, dizziness and more. And a few recent case reports and studies have hinted at a potential link.</p>.<p>A study published Monday in the Journal of International Audiology that looked at nearly 60 case reports and studies found that 15 per cent of adults with Covid-19 reported symptoms of tinnitus. The authors believe that the respondents were describing either a new condition or a worsening one, although they are following up with the 60 or so researchers to be certain about how the surveys were worded.</p>.<p>“In the 24 hours since we published, I’ve received about 100 emails,” said Kevin Munro, a professor of audiology at the University of Manchester and a co-author of the study. “Almost of all of them were people saying, ‘I was so happy to read about this, because my doctor thought I was crazy when I mentioned tinnitus and now I know I’m not the only one.’”</p>.<p>There is also some evidence that Covid-19 can aggravate symptoms among people who had tinnitus before they contracted the disease. A study published late last year in the journal Frontiers in Public Health surveyed 3,100 people with tinnitus and found that 40 per cent of the 237 respondents who had contracted Covid-19 reported that their symptoms were “significantly exacerbated” following the infection.</p>.<p>“There are a lot of viruses that have an impact on the ears, including measles, mumps and rubella,” said Dr. Eldre Beukes, the audiologist at Anglia Ruskin University in England who led the study. “It could also be the case that medication taken to combat Covid is making tinnitus worse. And there is a well-known link between tinnitus and stress.”</p>.<p>The study cited a variety of factors that have increased stress for nearly everyone in the pandemic, including fear of catching the coronavirus, and social distancing rules that have increased isolation and loneliness.</p>.<p>Home-schooling has also raised stress levels, as has greater consumption of coffee and alcohol, Beukes added.</p>.<p>Covid-19 has complicated life for tinnitus sufferers even if they have not contracted the virus, said Kim Weller, an IT specialist who lives in Houston and is part of a tinnitus support group based there.</p>.<p>“There’s a gentleman in Ohio who I text and talk on the phone with and I’d describe him as being at the end of his rope,” she said. “He’s not working, trouble sleeping, living alone. His situation is definitely worse because of Covid, because he’s just so isolated.”</p>.<p>Exactly why tinnitus affects certain people is a bit of a mystery. There are roughly 200 causes of the condition, including exposure to loud noises, stress, hearing loss and perforated eardrums. There is currently no cure. Patients are often treated with cognitive behavioral therapy — essentially, talk therapy designed to rewire thoughts and behaviors — or coached on how to habituate themselves to the condition.</p>.<p>The CDC found in a 2011-12 survey — the most recent data available — that 15 per cent of respondents said they had suffered some kind of tinnitus. Of them, 26 per cent said it was constant or near constant ringing, and 30 per cent described the condition as a “moderate” or “very big” problem in their lives.</p>.<p>A very small group of people in Beukes’ study — seven — reported that Covid-19 brought on tinnitus for the first time. Just over half of people with tinnitus said the illness had left their symptoms unchanged.</p>.<p>Curiously, 6 per cent said they were less bothered by tinnitus after contracting the disease. Beukes speculates that for these people, a life-threatening condition had the effect of reframing the noise in their head.</p>.<p>“Contracting Covid meant that in some cases they were struggling to survive, and that left them with a very different perspective,” she said.</p>.<p>The roughly 40 per cent of respondents who said that Covid-19 made their tinnitus worse includes people like Aisling Starrs of Derry, in Northern Ireland. She’d coped with hearing loss in her right ear her entire life. Two years ago, she gave birth to a daughter and within minutes noticed a buzzing in both ears that did not abate.</p>.<p>“Then in September I got Covid, and it went straight for my ears,” said Starrs, who is an occupational therapist. “On a scale of one to 10, it was a three before Covid. Since then, it’s been a seven.”</p>.<p>She had no idea that exacerbated tinnitus might be a Covid-related problem until she learned otherwise on the website of the British Tinnitus Association, a co-sponsor of the Anglia Ruskin study.</p>.<p>“I thought, ‘Thank God’ when I realized I wasn’t the only one out there,” she said. “I’ve met people through my work who don’t realize that there’s a medical term for the ringing in their ears. Just knowing that other people have the same condition is an enormous relief.”</p>