For All The Latest Medical News, Health News, Research News, COVID-19 News, Dengue News, Glaucoma News, Diabetes News, Herb News, Phytochemical News, Cardiology News, Epigenetic News, Cancer News, Doctor News, Hospital News
As people grow older, their ability to hear gradually decreases. This biological process leads to a sensorineural hearing disorder known as Age-Related Hearing Loss (ARHL) or Presbycusis.
Presbycusis is the third most common chronic health condition among the elderly and it usually affects both ears equally. While men develop a high-frequency hearing loss, women mostly show a low-frequency hearing loss.
Tiny hair cells that line the bottom of the cochlea in our inner ear aid us in hearing. As we get older, these hair cells get damaged and gradually die, leading to presbycusis. This is a permanent disorder as the damaged hair cells do not regrow.
Additionally, some changes occur in the central auditory system due to the effects of aging. The neurons in the auditory system may reduce slowly. They also begin to age and hence accumulate an aging pigment, lipofuscin. The volume of the auditory structure becomes less compared with to that of younger, which is due to the loss of neuropil.
Although aging is the biggest factor that causes presbycusis, other factors such as high blood pressure, diabetes, medicines that are toxic to the sensory cells, smoking, long exposure to loud noise, family continuum also contribute to this condition.
Sometimes abnormalities of the outer ear or the middle ear such as the reduced function of the tympanic membrane or the three tiny bones in the middle ear can also cause ARSL.
Most of the elderly who are affected with hearing loss have a combination of both age-related hearing loss and noise-induced hearing loss.
As presbycusis happens very gradually, it cannot be easily recognized.
The different signs and symptoms that are associated with ARHL are as follows:
Depending upon the part of the auditory system that gets damaged or the source of damage, presbycusis can be divided into four types, as follows:
Mixed presbycusis and intermediate presbycusis are the other two types of ARHL. If a combination of all four main types of presbycusis happens together, it is mixed. Additionally, if the damage is microstructural in the tip links of stereocilia and mechanoelectrical transduction channels it is intermediate.
Diagnosis and treatment/rehabilitation of ARHL are the same as that of any other sensorineural hearing loss. Use of hearing aids and implants are widely used to help patients with ARHL.