Hyperacusis After Trauma: Clinical Guidance

by Dr. Jennifer Gans 

 

Overview


- Hyperacusis = decreased tolerance to everyday sounds, often painful or overwhelming.
- Common in soldiers after blast injuries, PTSD, trauma, and prolonged noise exposure.
- Co-occurs with anxiety
- Often co-occurs with tinnitus.

 

The Facts:

- Symptoms are due to central auditory gain and fear conditioning, not structural ear damage.
- Trauma and hyperarousal amplify the perception of sound as threatening.
- Patients may describe ordinary sounds (dishes clinking, voices, doors closing) as painful or intolerable.

 

Common Misbeliefs

- “My ears are broken. Something is damaged.”
- “I’ll go deaf if I’m exposed to sound.”
- “I must protect my ears from all noise.”
→ These beliefs reinforce sound sensitivity and avoidance.

 

What Helps


- Accurate education: hyperacusis is benign and reversible.
- Sound enrichment (sound is safe and good!).
- Relaxation/mindfulness practices to lower hypervigilance.
- CBT or group therapy for anxiety and trauma.
- Address sleep issues.

 

What to Avoid


- Overuse of earplugs or over-protection (increases brain gain and sensitivity).
- Prednisone, unnecessary imaging, or invasive procedures (increase anxiety, no benefit).
- Reinforcing catastrophic beliefs.


 

Hyperacusis After Trauma: What You Need to Know
You Are Safe


- If ordinary sounds feel too loud or painful, it does not mean your ears are damaged.
- Your brain is temporarily “turning up the volume.”
- Hyperacusis is common after trauma and stress, and it is reversible.

 

Why It Feels Worse After Trauma


- Loud blasts/noise can make the brain over-sensitive.
- Stress and poor sleep put the brain on “high alert.”
- Fear memories connect sound with danger.

 

What Helps


- Learn the facts: hyperacusis is not ear damage.
- Expose yourself gradually to safe, gentle sounds (fan, nature, soft music).
- Avoid silence if possible – keep your ears busy and relaxed.
- Practice relaxation: breathing, mindfulness (see 5-Minute Breathing Exercise at MindfulTinnitusRelief.com).
- Stay active – don’t let sound sensitivity stop your life.

 

What to Avoid


- Don’t wear earplugs all the time (except in truly loud environments).
- Don’t Google horror stories about hyperacisis/tinnitus/hearing loss.
- Don’t believe the fear-based thought: “This means my ears are broken.”
- Avoid unnecessary medicines, scans, or scams.


👉 Bottom Line: Fear & Anxiety must be treated! With accurate education, sound exposure, and stress reduction, the brain resets its “volume control” and sound is no longer painful.

Artículos

Tinnitus: When You Are Told to 'Go Home and Live With It'
Tinnitus: When Nothing Is Broken—but Everything Feels Wrong
Tinnitus & “Checking Behaviors”: The Hidden Cost of the Tinnitus Journal
Tinnitus After Trauma: Clinical Guidance
Hyperacusis After Trauma: Clinical Guidance
Hyperacusis: Why Everyday Sounds Can Feel Too Loud
Does Everyone with Tinnitus Need a Hearing Aid? The Answer Is NO
Why MindfulTinnitusRelief.com Is Successful
Vertigo and Tinnitus: Two Symptoms, One Brain Response
Tinnitus and the Internet: How Online Misinformation Turns a Benign Sensation into a Chronic Source of Fear
Tinnitus & Other Phantom Sensations: When the Brain Searches for What It No Longer Perceives
The Importance of Tinnitus Education
Making Tinnitus Boring to the Brain
When the Brain Turns Up the Volume: Understanding Hyperacusis and Predictive Failure
Bothersome Tinnitus: When the Brain’s Natural Cancellation System Fails