Does hearing continue to deteriorate after exposure to noise stops?
please try to help
When hearing impaired (especially at a young age), whether it is from loud music or being in a noisy environment (a soldier in NOISY AREA for years)
Does the hearing continue to deteriorate even after you stop being in a noisy environment? Or if noise stops also stops a continuous decrease Is there a difference, regarding the continued deterioration in hearing, between acoustic damage resulting from a sudden noise (explosion for example) and which has not disappeared,
And permanent acoustic sabotage after several years of exposure to noise and the hearing deterioration continues though slowly?
M PELEG
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Is there a difference, regarding the continued deterioration in hearing, between acoustic damage resulting from a sudden noise (explosion for example) and which has not disappeared,
And permanent acoustic sabotage after several years of exposure to noise and the hearing deterioration continues though slowly?
@ladyofthelake My apologies for not seeing your message sooner. You obviously have noise induced hearing loss which isn't surprising considering the work you were doing with your father. I spent a lot of time as a kid hunting with my dad. We also did trap shooting. I'm sure my hearing loss is genetically predisposed, but that noise, along with a lot of other noise I was exposed to in my late teens and 20s all contributed to my progressive sensorineural hearing loss.
There is no doubt that hearing in noisy settings with a lot of background noise is one of the most obvious signs of 'hearing gone south'. I've been using hearing aids for decades, and now also have a cochlear implant. The technology has improved greatly over time. I feel blessed to be living in times when this kind of help is available.
i must ask again- because no one answer and a self-story is not an answer - sorry - Is there a difference, regarding the continued deterioration in hearing, between acoustic damage resulting from a sudden noise (explosion for example) and which has not disappeared,
And permanent acoustic sabotage after several years of exposure to noise and the hearing deterioration continues though slowly?
If I understand your question, Ava, you are asking whether there is a difference between a one time exposure to very loud noise (explosion) and long term exposure to loud sounds (being in a combat zone or working in a very loud factory). If that is correct, from my limited knowledge in some circumstances our hearing can recover from a one time exposure (explosion). Sustained exposure to the loud noises are much harder on our bodies and brains. In most cases, this type of exposure can cause nerve damage. This coupled with other health issues may become progressive.
I sincerely ask you to speak to your hearing professional about this. There are many variables within each of the exposures you proposed that could affect the long term outcome. Please, talk to an Otolaryngologist or Audiologist and discuss the finer points of your question thoroughly.
Best, L
Apologies, my spell checker changed aba to Ava! I’m sorry I wrote your name incorrectly.
all "clever" audiologists say that hearing loss stops after leaving a noisy envuronment. no one can bring academic papers about but I am sure that you may lose hearing more and more without any other variable but not so quickly as before. I need academic research and academic papers! I know other parameters of hearing loss but everyone who is in this kind of lossing- everyone is unique and not as another one. The academic base is needed. thanks
This information from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Center for Disease Control (CDC) may be of interest. https://www.hearingloss.org/hearing-help/hearing-loss-basics/prevention/
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
A major cause of hearing loss in our society is noise exposure. Tiny hair cells in the ear are damaged when assaulted by loud noise. Once those hair cells are destroyed they cannot be replaced.
How Loud is Too Loud?
According to NIDCD’s Noisy Planet website, “The impact of noise adds up over a lifetime. If you are exposed to loud sounds on a regular basis, your risk for permanent damage increases over time. Even a single but long-lasting loud event can cause damage. Limit your exposure to sounds at or above 100 decibels to no more than 15 minutes, and limit sounds that are at or above 110 decibels to no more than 1 minute.”
Watch this video by the CDC about how loud noise damages hair cells.
Repeated and lengthy exposure to loud sound – whether is it music or a jackhammer – will eventually produce a sensorineural hearing loss. See the NIDCD Listen Up! Inforgraphic (text version available). Also see the Dangerous Decibels’ Decibel Exposure Time Guidelines.
How to Reduce the Damage to Hearing from Noise
Your ears can be your warning system for potentially dangerous noises. The noise is too loud when:
You have to raise your voice to be understood by someone standing nearby
The noise hurts your ears
You develop a buzzing or ringing sound in your ears, even temporarily (indicates some hair cells have died)
You don’t hear as well as you normally do until several hours after you get away from the noise.
How to Protect Yourself When Around Loud Noise
Block the noise (wear earplugs or earmuffs)
Avoid the noise (put hands over ears if you can’t walk away)
Turn down the volume
Protecting Kids’ Hearing
Get your children involved in their own hearing health. For more resources, go to:
It’s a Noisy Planet: Protect Their Hearing, NIDCD, National Institutes of Health
Listen to Your Buds, American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Turn it to the Left, American Academy of Audiology
THIS IS NOT THE ANSWER. WE KNOW ALL ABOUT HEARING LOSS BUT NOT THE EXACT ANSWER TO THIS QUEATION. YOU MISS THE MAIN POINT.
May I make a suggestion please? Academic papers are available to all of us via the wonders of the Internet.
Those of us communicating on Connect are all seekers of the best possible information we look for the science and research based information. As a participant and volunteer mentor in Lung Health and Joint & Bone Health groups I spend many hours finding, reading and sharing the best available information. Many other groups are enriched by the research efforts of their participants, since the world of health and disease is far too extensive for any one person to have answers to all the questions at their fingertips. I am also a person with hearing loss who worked in noisy environments, but I have no time for another research topic.
Would you possibly consider becoming a researcher of academic and scientific information about noise-induced hearing loss? When you find the specific information you are seeking, you could then share it with the rest of us. I am sure there are many of us who would be grateful.
Sue
I will and I am now collecting all about it. there are some articles but I need more in order to establish a complete conclusion