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Home > Family Health & Lifestyle > Senior Health > Common Problems > Loss of hearing

Loss of hearing


The gradual loss of hearing that occurs as you age is a common condition. Over time, the wear and tear from noise contributes to hearing loss by damaging the cochlea, a part of your inner ear. Doctors believe that heredity and chronic exposure to loud noises are the main factors that contribute to hearing loss. At times earwax blockage, can prevent your ears from conducting sounds as well as they should.
Damage to the inner ear can't be reversed though you and your doctor or hearing specialist (audiologist) can take steps to improve what you hear.
Signs and symptoms of hearing loss may include:

· Muffled quality of speech and other sounds
· Difficulty understanding words, in a noisy crowd
· Asking others to speak more slowly, clearly and loudly
· Needing to turn up the volume of the television or radio
· Withdrawal from conversations
· Avoidance of some social settings

 Highlights

Nutrition

Sleeping   
    (Problems)
    Disorders
   

Cardiovascular 
    Diseases in old     age

Post Retirement     Blues

Related Issues

(Cardiovascular Disease)

  Congestive      Heart Failure

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  Diseases of      Mitral Valve

 

Treatment

If your hearing loss is due to damage to your inner ear, a hearing aid may be helpful. Getting used to a hearing aid takes time. The sound you hear is different because it's amplified. You may need to try more than one device to find one that works well for you. Hearing aids come in a variety of sizes, shapes and styles. Some hearing aids rest behind your ear with a small tube delivering the amplified sound to the ear canal. Other styles fit in the outer ear or within the ear canal.
If you can't hear as well as you used to because of earwax blockage, your doctor can remove the wax and improve your hearing. This is a very simple painless procedure.
If you have severe hearing loss, a cochlear implant may be an option. Unlike a hearing aid, a cochlear implant takes the place of the damaged or nonworking parts of the inner ear.

 

  

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