Age-related hearing loss
Hearing loss - age related; PresbycusisAge-related hearing loss, or presbycusis, is the slow loss of hearing that occurs as people get older.
Causes
Tiny hair cells inside your inner ear help you hear. They pick up sound waves and change them into the nerve signals that your brain interprets as sound. Hearing loss occurs when the tiny hair cells are damaged or die. The hair cells do not regrow, so hearing loss caused by hair cell damage is permanent.
There is no known single cause of age-related hearing loss. Most commonly, it is caused by changes in the inner ear that occur as you grow older. Your genes and loud noise (for example from loud concerts or music headphones) may play a role.
The following factors contribute to age-related hearing loss:
- Family history (age-related hearing loss tends to run in families)
- Repeated exposure to loud noises
- Smoking (smokers are more likely to have such hearing loss than nonsmokers)
- Certain medical conditions, such as diabetes
- Certain medicines, such as chemotherapy drugs for cancer
Symptoms
Loss of hearing often occurs slowly over time.
Symptoms include:
- Difficulty hearing people around you
- Having to raise the volume on the TV
- Frequently asking people to repeat themselves
- Frustration at not being able to hear
- Certain sounds seeming overly loud
- Problems hearing in noisy areas
- Problems telling apart certain sounds, such as "s" or "th"
- More difficulty understanding people with higher-pitched voices
- Ringing in the ears
Talk to your health care provider if you have any of these symptoms.
Exams and Tests
Your provider will do a complete physical exam. This helps find if a medical problem is causing your hearing loss. Your provider will use an instrument called an otoscope to look in your ears. Sometimes, ear wax can block the ear canals and cause hearing loss.
You may be sent to an ear, nose, and throat doctor and a hearing specialist (audiologist). Hearing tests can help determine the extent of hearing loss.
Hearing tests
An audiometry exam tests your ability to hear sounds. Sounds vary, based on their loudness (intensity) and the speed of sound wave vibrations (tone)...
Treatment
There is no cure for age-related hearing loss. Treatment is focused on improving your everyday function. The following may be helpful:
Improving your everyday function
If you are living with hearing loss, you know that it takes extra effort to communicate with others. There are techniques you can learn to improve co...
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Hearing aids
Hearing aids
If you are living with hearing loss, you know that it takes extra effort to communicate with others. There are many different devices that can improv...
Read Article Now Book Mark Article - Telephone amplifiers and other assistive devices
- Sign language (for those with severe hearing loss)
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Speech reading (lip reading and using visual cues to aid communication)
Speech reading
It may be hard for a person with hearing loss to understand a conversation with another person. Being in a group, conversation can be even harder. ...
Read Article Now Book Mark Article - A cochlear implant may be recommended for people with severe hearing loss. Surgery is done to place the implant. The implant allows the person to detect sounds again and with practice can allow the person to understand speech, but it does not restore normal hearing.
Cochlear implant
A cochlear implant is a small electronic device that helps people hear. It can be used for people who are deaf or very hard of hearing.
Read Article Now Book Mark Article
Outlook (Prognosis)
Age-related hearing loss most often gets worse slowly. The hearing loss cannot be reversed and may lead to deafness.
Hearing loss may cause you to avoid leaving home. Seek help from your provider and family and friends to avoid becoming isolated. Hearing loss can be managed so that you can continue to live a full and active life.
Managed
If you are living with hearing loss, you know that it takes extra effort to communicate with others. There are techniques you can learn to improve co...
Possible Complications
Hearing loss can result in both physical (for example not hearing a fire alarm) and psychological (such as social isolation) problems.
The hearing loss may lead to deafness.
Deafness
Hearing loss is being partly or totally unable to hear sound in one or both ears.
When to Contact a Medical Professional
Hearing loss should be checked as soon as possible. This helps rule out causes such as too much wax in the ear or side effects of medicines. Your provider should have you get a hearing test.
Contact your provider right away if you have a sudden change in your hearing or hearing loss with other symptoms, such as:
- Headache
- Vision changes
- Dizziness
References
Eggermont JJ. Types of hearing loss. In: Eggermont JJ, ed. Hearing Loss. Cambridge, MA: Elsevier Academic Press; 2017:chap 5.
Emmett SD. Otolaryngology in the elderly. In: Flint PW, Francis HW, Haughey BH, et al, eds. Cummings Otolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery. 7th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2021:chap 13.
Kerber KA, Baloh RW. Neuro-otology: diagnosis and management of neuro-otological disorders. In: Jankovic J, Mazziotta JC, Pomeroy SL, Newman NJ, eds. Bradley and Daroff's Neurology in Clinical Practice. 8th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2022:chap 22.
Weinstein B. Disorders of hearing. In: Fillit HM, Rockwood K, Young J, eds. Brocklehurst's Textbook of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology. 8th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2017:chap 96.
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Hearing loss
Animation
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Ear anatomy - illustration
The ear consists of external, middle, and inner structures. The eardrum and the 3 tiny bones conduct sound from the eardrum to the cochlea.
Ear anatomy
illustration
Review Date: 11/29/2022
Reviewed By: Josef Shargorodsky, MD, MPH, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. Also reviewed by David C. Dugdale, MD, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.