Did you know that hearing loss affects around 14 percent of the adult population in this country – including 25 percent of people over the age of 55. Tack on another 14.9 percent for kids who have some degree of hearing loss, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the impact this problem is clear. What do you think these individuals can’t hear, though?
What You Need to Know about Hearing Loss
Hearing range varies from person to person, depending on a number of factors such as their type of hearing loss. There are four categories of hearing loss:
Conductive – Implies sounds cannot get through to the inner ear to be interpreted by the brain.
Sensorineural – Loss results from damage or a defect to the inner ear or hearing nerve. The damage might be due to a congenital disorder, disease or trauma
Mixed Hearing Loss – A combination of both conductive and sensorineural problems
Auditory Neuropathy Spectrum Disorder – Occurs when the brain cannot interpret the sound due to damage to the inner ear.
Each form of loss brings on different symptoms. There are some common complaints between them, though: including what sounds they may or may not hear. Consider five sounds a person with hearing loss might miss.
Frequencies That are High
For some individuals, their hearing loss is limited to high frequencies – this person fails to interpret anything above 2,000 Hertz. This form of hearing loss makes it difficult to understand words. When this person watches TV or has a conversation, certain words will sound muttered or unclear for this person. The words affected contain the consonants S, H, and F, which usually fall between 1,500 to 6,000 Hertz.
Frequencies That are Low
Often the defect is at the opposite end of the sound scale. The low-frequency hearing loss involves sensorineural damage and impacts sound produced at less than 2,000 Hertz. Usually, low frequency hearing loss is a genetic or congenital defect such as cochlear malformation.
Soft Tones
A person with conductive hearing loss can hear most sounds if they are loud enough, but not at normal volumes. This is why amplifying the sound with hearing aids is a solution for them and why they are always turning up the TV or need headphones to hear music. The ears work if the sound is loud enough to get through. When someone speaks in a normal voice, they may hear something but it sounds mumbled.
Conversation in a Noisy Room
Sometimes, it’s what you can hear that becomes the problem. People with a significant hearing challenge will experience something call recruitment noise. In other words, the background sounds overwhelm everything else. A sound like the air conditioner turning on masks all other noise.
This background noise can be painfully loud causing physical distress, too. The phenomenon occurs when an individual has both normal and damaged hair cells in the inner ear. The normal cells take over for damaged ones close by causing the sound to be excessively loud.
Speech of Any Kind
Profound hearing loss means you don’t hear speech at all. Medical professionals use a classification system to measure hearing loss in decibels – a person with normal hearing measures anywhere from -10 to 15 dB HL (decibels of hearing loss) during a hearing test. To be diagnosed with profound hearing loss, the classification is 91 or more dB HL.
No two people hear or don’t hear the same thing regardless of their hearing challenges. It all depends on why your hearing is diminished and how severely.
* How hearing works
* hearing loss
* conductive hearing loss
* sensorineural
* Studies
* Mechanisms