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You are here: Home / NeffMusic News / Ototoxic-A Word Every Musician Should Know

Ototoxic-A Word Every Musician Should Know

February 19, 2025 by Steve 10 Comments

Ototoxic.  Do you know what this word means?  I didn’t.  At least not until 2024.  If you have followed my blog for any length of time and have read my “Funny as a Brain Tumor” story,  you probably already know that I have been through the mill with my medical history.  That story, that encompasses only ten years of my life, is just a bit of the drama that I have had to live through since 1995.  In that blog post, I write about some of my hearing issues and describe how at times, music would sound out of tune and very dissonant to my brain.  This has always perplexed the doctors I have gone to see but luckily, since 2005, it only happens a couple of times a year and only lasts a couple of weeks.

That was until 2024.  Last year, in April, my hearing went bonkers.  I thought I was having one of my bi-yearly hearing attacks but much worse.  The problem, was that this time, my hearing did not get better after a couple of weeks.  My hearing was messed up 95% of the time from April-November (8 months!)  It was so bad, that I was starting to think about selling my saxophones and calling it a day!

You have to understand that what I am describing is terrible for a musician. You can go back and read my “Funny as a Brain Tumor” story for more details.  Basically, the gist of it is, that music sounds horrendously out of tune and dissonant.  Even playing the saxophone by myself sounded out of tune.  I could play something as simple as “Mary had a Little Lamb” and it would sound out of tune and wrong.  Even though I was pushing all the right keys and blowing the sax as I always do, the melody would sound horrible to my ears and brain.  The notes were not in tune with each other.  Even if I played that melody on an in-tune piano, the melody would sound out of tune.  I was also feeling like I was in an airplane when the pressure in your ears is messed or when you have water in your ears.  Everything sounded far away and muffled and even the tone on my sax sounded muted and nasal sounding.   Nothing I could do would fix it and I tried everything I could think of.

I was at a loss about what was causing this extreme hearing disability and then in August, my hearing miraculously got better for about 10 days.   I had started taking allergy pills at that time and concluded that I must have an allergy to something and that was what was causing my hearing problems.  I was excited to figure it out and I thought I had a solution, take allergy pills everyday.

My hopes were quickly dashed when about ten days later, my hearing issues came back even though I was still taking the allergy pills.   I even took two a day (even though the directions said to only take one a day) in hopes that I needed the extra dose as a special case.   It did not help.  I was devastated.  It’s hard to feel hope and be confident that you have an answer and then have it all come crumbling down around you.

I went on with my life through September, October and November.  I couldn’t listen to music and even though saxophone playing was a major part of my life, I really couldn’t play the sax very much when the feedback to my ears was that it sounded horrible and out of tune.  Besides all that, I started experiencing tinnitus all the time.  It was a constant high pitch ringing that never stopped.  It’s weird, because you feel like you are hearing it in your ears but when you cover your ears as tight as you can it continues inside your head.  The worse time for me to notice the tinnitus was in the middle of the night or in the morning.  Whenever I woke up and it was dead quiet in the room,  I would hear this high pitched tone ringing in my ears.

In November,  I was browsing the internet for solutions (like I had a hundred times before) when I stumbled on the word “ototoxic”.    I had never heard this word before, what did it mean?   I looked it up.

Ototoxic substances are agents that can damage the hearing and balance systems. They can cause a range of hearing loss, from temporary to permanent, as well as dizziness, vertigo, and tinnitus (ringing in the ears).

What?!  I had never heard this before.  I read that certain medication could be “ototoxic”  and cause issues with your hearing.  I was on a few medications at the time and started doing google searches for their names + ototoxic.  I went through each medication I had been taking and when I got to Tamsulosin (Flomax) it was listed under the medications that could be “ototoxic” (although it is not on other ototoxic lists because that side effect is so rare).     I believe this is the site where I found the info among others.

Here is what AI comes up with when you do a search for “tamsulosin & ototoxicity”:

There isn’t much information about tamsulosin and ototoxicity right now, but ototoxicity is a possible side effect of many medications, including some blood pressure drugs.

What is ototoxicity?
  • Ototoxicity is a term for damage to the inner ear caused by certain medications. 
  • The word “oto” means ear, and “toxic” means harmful. 
  • Symptoms include tinnitus (ringing in the ears), hearing loss, and balance problems. 
  • Damage caused by ototoxic drugs can be permanent. 
How can I prevent ototoxicity?
  • Be aware of the potential side effects of any medication you’re prescribed. 
  • Avoid or stop taking ototoxic drugs if possible. 
  • If you’re taking an ototoxic drug, see an audiologist or ear, nose, and throat specialist. 
Other ototoxic drugs: 
  • Pain medications
  • Aminoglycoside antibiotics
  • Chemotherapy drugs
  • Antimalarial drugs
  • Antidepressants
  • Macrolide antibiotics
  • Salicylates
  • Loop diuretics
  • Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
  • Quinine

How could a medication that makes you pee better effect your hearing?   Then, while I was sitting at my desk, it hit me that when I had taken the allergy pills in August, I had also stopped taking Tamsulosin (Flomax).  It wasn’t related, but a few days before I started taking the allergy medicine, I had decided to stop my Tamsulosin because I wasn’t sure what it was doing or if it was helping me.  A couple of weeks later, I started it again.

That’s when it hit me. My hearing got better about 7-10 days after stopping Tamsulosin (Flomax) and my hearing got bad again 7-10 days after I had started taking Tamsulosin again!   I was convinced that this was the answer.

I stopped my Tamsulosin!  Sure enough, my hearing got better about a week later.  I still had the constant tinnitus but music sounded good to me and I could start listening to it again as well as play my saxophone.

Since the end of November, my hearing has been good as far as listening to music.  My tinnitus still hasn’t gone away and maybe it is permanent from taking Tamsulosin for 6 months but I can listen to music again.   I also still have hearing loss, deaf in one ear and what I am told is probably a eustachian tube dysfunction (which is not fun either and might be connected to my hearing loss) but I can play my sax again and it sounds pretty much as it should to my ears.  I am so happy to be able to share this with all of you.

I wanted to share this with everyone because although I had gone to a number of doctors during this time, none of them had even considered that it could be the Flomax.  Ototoxicity on the list of side effects for Tamsulosin was really low.  Like 1% I think,  but with my history of experiencing a range of medical issues that were in the 1% chance category, is it not a surprise that another one should be added to my list?

The other reason I wanted to share this publicly is in case there are other musicians out there experiencing hearing issues and even hearing loss.  From what I have read, sometimes these ototoxic drugs can also cause hearing loss whether it be a gradual decline as you are taking the drug or a more severe decline.  Many people write about getting off the offending drug and having their hearing restored back to normal levels while others found it was too late and their hearing was permanently damaged from the drug they were taking.

I write all this not to scare everyone to stay away from any medication that might be “ototoxic” but to inform you that that could be a possibility.  If you are taking a medication and experiencing hearing issues, then do yourself a favor and do a google search  to see if the medication is on the ototoxic medication list.   If you catch it in time, maybe you can stop the damage before it gets too bad.  I’m hoping and praying my tinnitus goes away but at this point, I am just grateful I can listen to music and play my saxophone again.  I’m posting this for all those out there on the internet who might be searching for a solution like I was.  Hopefully, you will find this and it will give you that solution.  I hope so.   Please let me know if it does.      Steve

 

Filed Under: NeffMusic News Tagged With: drug, hearing loss, medical, musician, Ototoxic, tamsulosin, tinnitus

Steve

About Steve

Steve Neff has been playing and teaching saxophone and jazz improvisation around the New England area for over 30 years. He is the author of many best selling jazz improvisation methods as well as founding the popular jazz video lesson site Neffmusic.com.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. AvatarGiuseppe C. says

    February 20, 2025 at 9:43 am

    Hi Steve,
    thanks for sharing your experience.
    I knew about the drugs that can cause hearing loss, because, even though strangely not recommended by doctors, every time they prescribe me a new drug I go and check the interactions with the other drugs I take, and the side effects, consulting not only the package leaflet but also the technical sheet on the internet, which seems me more complete; there are many of these drugs and for the most varied pathologies: several times I have been worried about having to take a treatment based on these when reading about the side effects of such damage; but, unfortunately, while I could eliminate some, others were necessary.
    For now everything is fine and my hearing is holding up. I hope that also for the other side effects is the same.
    I am sending you a private message about my experience with the active ingredient of a drug that I fear was perhaps, probably, the cause of my hospitalization, in November 2023, in neurology for a loss of consciousness lasting half an hour; perhaps, in my opinion, caused by syncope due to a drop in blood pressure.
    I’m sending it to you privately, because in Italy some pharmaceutical companies seem to me to be a bit touchy at times, even though they themselves indicate the same side effects, and, therefore, I would like to avoid a lawsuit.
    Giuseppe.

    Reply
    • AvatarBrian Lamers says

      March 20, 2026 at 11:00 am

      Just want to say thank you Steve. From one musician to another for taking the time to put your story out there. By the time I found your post I had pretty much come to the same conclusion as you with regards to tamsulosin and my hearing and balance problems. Your article just reassured me that I wasn’t crazy. All the best from the little village of Orono Ontario Canada.
      Brian Lamers guitar player that always wanted to play the sax.
      Cheers

      Reply
      • SteveSteve says

        March 21, 2026 at 8:34 pm

        Brian, I’m sorry to hear about your hearing issues. I hope that the article can help you and that by taking action the hearing issues can get better, After I stopped the Tamsulosin, the wild hearing fluctuation stopped and I haven’t had an issue with listening to music since. Unfortunately, the tinnitus that started right before I stopped taking it has continued. If this article can help one other person who has similar side effects as I had then it was worth writing and posting publicly. Good luck to you!

        Reply
  2. AvatarSoren says

    February 28, 2025 at 12:10 pm

    Dear Steve,
    I am a long time reader of your blog and even though I never commented before, over the years I have gotten an enormous amount of joy out of your reviews and transcriptions. I’ve read your “funny as a brain tumor” post when you posted it and now this one and I’m really sorry you had to go through all of it. I just wanted to say thank you for all you do for the sax community and that I am incredibly happy that you could figure out that is was the medication. I wish you all the best of health and I’m keeping my finger crossed that the tinnitus might soften down or leave you for good.
    All the best

    Reply
  3. AvatarWilliam Veguez says

    February 28, 2025 at 2:33 pm

    Hey Steve,
    I am in my seventies and have tinnitus since I was twenty nine years old.
    I have gotten so used to the the tinnitus that I simply don’t even notice that it is
    there all the time. I’ve even heard of people meditating to their tinnitus
    ringing! For the last fifteen years of my life I have had hearing loss to the point that I wear hearing aids. I’m pretty sure that this is hereditary. I’m almost positive that it has nothing to do with tinnitus.
    So, the reason that I write this is to let you know that you can live with tinnitus if you learn to ignore it. That might sound crazy but it can be done.

    Reply
  4. AvatarPaul says

    March 2, 2025 at 11:32 am

    Hi Steve.Back in 1988 a floor monitor fed back I was standing in front of.It literally felt like my head lifted off my shoulders.That was the start of my nightmare with inner ear problems..Dizzyness. Sounded like a jet was flying through my head. Everything would spin. Had a cat scan of my head and the neurologist basically told me it was a virus or infection and there was nothing they could do. I think after a year it got better and I learned to deal with it. I was diagnosed with prostate cancer 2 years ago. I had a biopsy done because I had a hard time peeing.The biopsy revealed prostate cancer.Been taking Tamsulosin for the past 2 yrs. And have not had that problem.Good luck.

    Reply
  5. AvatarGiuseppe C. says

    May 25, 2026 at 3:38 pm

    Hi Steve,
    since I don’t know where to put this idea of ​​mine, maybe it’s okay if I post it here.
    While thinking to search for a healthy and perfect material for making mouthpieces, I wondered if anyone had ever thought of “real” yellow amber, a beautiful, natural fossilized resin sometimes used for pipe shanks.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amber
    It’s probably expensive, and you need to be wary of imitations made from various artificial resins and plastics.
    It’s made from succinic acid.
    A chemist can tell us if theirs is safe or if it poses any health risks.
    Giuseppe.

    Reply
    • SteveSteve says

      May 27, 2026 at 5:37 pm

      Cool idea!

      Reply
  6. AvatarGiuseppe C. says

    May 27, 2026 at 4:57 am

    Hi Steve, I’m taking advantage of this post about potential damage to saxophonists to offer some advice.
    I recently had surgery on my lower lip for actinic cheilitis; a biopsy revealed two actinic keratoses, which are precancerous lesions caused by sun exposure.
    It generally affects people with fair skin, but in general, lips contain little melanin, a substance that should protect the skin from sun damage.
    I suspect—but I’m NOT a doctor—that the mechanical action of the reed/mouthpiece may have also contributed to the damage already caused by the sun.
    In any case, no one warned me to be careful about sun exposure on my lips, and so, now that I’ve learned the hard way about the risks, I think it’s only right to warn anyone who, like me, isn’t aware of it, to do what I should have done: for prudence and prevention protect their lips, even in winter, with a product that contains both SPF 50+ and moisturizer. It’s a minimal expense, and I’ve started doing it. Also, wear wide-brimmed hats to protect yourself from the sun.
    Perhaps it would also be a good idea to replace, or gold-plated, mouthpieces that are starting to taste bad or are old and have the plating damaged: of course, this is just my suspicion and a prudential thought, which is worth what it’s worth, as I’m NOT a doctor.
    Giuseppe.

    Reply
    • SteveSteve says

      May 27, 2026 at 5:36 pm

      Thanks for sharing this. I did a lot of hiking over the last 10 years and although I always wore sunscreen, I never thought to put it on my lips. Your advice is good and should be heeded. Thanks, Steve

      Reply

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By the way, BIG COMPLIMENTS to you, Steve! Not only are you a great player, you are also a great teacher! I, too, am a woodwinds player/teacher. I have new inspiration to play and teach because of you. The concepts and “thinking” is similar to what I already learned in College, but hearing you explain and PLAY the concepts REALLY MAKES THE DIFFERENCE! Also, your written patterns are more interesting than other books I have seen! Keep up the good work. I will be recommending your sit… Read more
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I can see from your instructional videos that you are a fantastic teacher – one that can truly relate to all ages – humble yet very positive in approach – never coming across as superior and yet so totally capable of demonstrating the principles and techniques that you seek to impart to the students. I have gained so much confidence in my playing from “pouring over” time and again these invaluable lessons. Invaluable not only in musical content, but also in human interaction content. I am absolu… Read more
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Thank you for all the educational information you provide.  I am a classically trained musician.  Professionally, I am a 4th and 5th grade band teacher.  I have played piano and sax for many years, but now I am starting to gig out more. I have always improvised by ear in the past. I have gotten by with my strong sense of pitch, rhythm and melodic contour. However, I want to go deeper. I want to play with a greater variety of melodic and rhythmic ideas to pull from.  I have studied to gain a … Read more
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Two years later I began a search for a sax teacher and happened to come across Steve Neff when I was searching YouTube for sax teachers.  I went to neffmusic.com and was very impressed with the lessons Steve Neff was offering.  The concept of selecting lessons was an approach that I thought was unique and purchased a few lessons.  I liked the lessons so much that I signed-up for a 6 month package. I was very happy with all the lessons I selected.  I also purchased Steve’s book Mastering the B… Read more
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Never really had lessons before just kinda worked things out on my own. Was in a rut but your lessons are really helpful in opening melodic possibilities. Ur an awesome resource to the saxophone community. Thanks for sharing. 

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I want to thank you again, because, not only are you an inspiration to listen to, you are a fine teacher!

I have been teaching sax and other winds for over 20 years, and you give me that “push” to give my students more!

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Mr. Neff,  I want to thank you for sharing your God-given talents through your on-line lessons.  My husband, Michael, is blind, but he is a great sax player and he has been enjoying your lessons for quite some time now.  It’s not unusual for me to hear “Hey, babe, listen to THIS!” – and he will cut loose on his sax, just thrilled at what he learned during his session with you.  His excitement warms my heart!  You have no idea how much you have poured into my husband.  You have opened musical … Read more

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I must say again how much I appreciate all your material. Including the video tutorials. It help keep me focused and knowing what to aim for. And your laid back teaching style appeals to me too. 

Thanks

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I just wanted to write a thank you note to you for this website. I play and teach saxophone, but I have always been intimidated by the gear aspect. Your website has helped me become a lot more knowledgable. Your knowledge is staggering! I’m telling all my students about your website. Pierre
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I would like to say that in the last year my sax playing has progressed loads from your lessons. I have had a sax for about 20 years and dabbled with lessons from a few teachers and have learnt very little from them. As you have said in your lessons many teachers tell you to use the blues scale and leave it there, not even showing you the resolution points!!. I am now believing I can in time become a good improviser.
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It is so refreshing to have a great player, who can provide lessons and examples in a manner which is understandable to most any enthusiastic saxophonist who is ready to improve. not just the, do this, do that, memorize this, memorize that… while all that is absolutely necessary, you go on to give reasons and examples to explain and validate why you have to do all of these things, the benefits, if you will… that is the key for me, you tell, explain, demonstrate, explain some more, you give perso… Read more
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Thank You Steve. I think that I will be busy for years. Thank You for your great contribution to jazz music. Your books, more than teaching “how to play jazz”, actually teach “how to speak jazz”. I wish I found your methods years ago.  

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Your major diatonic patterns book is great. I”m studying the first twenty patterns (first twenty pages) each day with different articulation each day and slowly increasing the tempo each week or so.  There is a noticeable improvement in finger coordination across all keys and its amazing how much more secure I feel on the difficult keys when attempting to play pieces with 5+ flats/sharps. I’m able to sort out the fingerings for these pieces now much more quickly than before, often in one or two … Read more
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Hi Steve,

First, I want to thank you for all of your great lessons. They are like a “For Dummies” version of all the books on my shelf. The lessons break things down into manageable pieces, and give me the confidence that I’m practicing the right pieces. I’m starting to make progress.   Thank You,   Kim

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I have found your videos and publications inspiring and your contribution to the world of saxophone playing is immense. Paul
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