Hearing Loss and Deafness
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Language defines us as human. Hearing is how we learn speech. As we learn
our language as children, we use that language to organize how
we see the world. Hearing is how we best receive the speech
sounds that contain the ideas, feelings and personalities of
other humans.
If we lose hearing, we
lose a bit of of our humanity. The device we call the ear
performs the task of translating the analog sound waves in air
into digitized nerve impulses in the organ of hearing. The
process of hearing involves two principal stages. First,
the sound waves traveling in the air are reproduced in the
fluids of the cochlear portion of the inner ear. The structures
which accomplish this task include the outer ear, the ear
passage, and the ear drum and bony chain. The next phase of
hearing involves the hair cell array in the organ of Corti
of the cochlea, which analyses the waves and converts them
into the complex digital code carried by the nerve of hearing to
the brain. Additional stages of hearing include the brain which
constantly adjusts the cochlea depending on what we intend
to hear. Our ears exhibit miraculously
sensitivity.
Disorders of the
ear may affect either or both stages. The two over all types of
loss are:
conductive.......caused by
problems affecting the first stage of sound processing
nerve loss.........resulting
from malfunctions in the second and later stages.
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Sensitivity - Inner Ear Sensitivities |
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The conduction mechanism of the first
stage, at the threshold of hearing for a 1000 Hz tone moves a
distance of 1/10th the diameter
of a hydrogen atom. We perceive the
movement as sound.
| Mode |
Lowest Reported
Threshold |
| Auditory |
10-4 dyn/cm2 peak sound pressure |
| Seismic |
5 X 10-4 cm/sec2 peak acceleration |
| Rotational |
0.04 deg/sec peak velocity |
| Gravity |
5 cm/sec2 lineal acceleration |
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CONDUCTIVE LOSSES
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Conductive losses are caused by anything
interfering with the first stage of sound processing. Conductive
losses make the sounds seem faint or distant. When the sound
source is made louder, the hearing loss is completely overcome.
Often the hearing loss is accompanied by a feeling of blockage.
Common
causes include:
wax in the outer ear passage
or
fluid in the
middle ear.
Other conditions
include otosclerosis which jams the bony linkage between the ear
drum and the inner ear, or ear drum/bony chain damage from
chronic infection.
Conductive losses almost always can be
repaired by either medicine, surgery or a combination.
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Wax in the Outer Ear Passage - Otitus Externa |
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Otitis externa has many different names
depending on the stage of the disease. Some call it swimmer's
ear. Others refer to a "fungus" in their ears. The most closely
related condition anywhere else in the body is eczema.
This condition usually starts when the natural wax barrier in
the ear is damaged. Wax is a substance produced by the skin in
the outer passage of the ear which protects the ear from
moisture and bacteria. It is not a waste product. Sooner or
later, all artificial attempts to remove wax damage the
protection of the outer passage of the ear. This is why we
are so opposed to using cotton-tipped applicators, hair pins,
and other instruments as part of personal hygiene. The wax
is formed within the ear and slides out the ear where the
movement of the jaw joint crumbles the dried wax and allows it
to flake out. Beyond the unsightly wax which appears at the very
edge of the ear passage and which can be easily reached with a
damp face cloth gently twirled on the finger, there is usually
no visible wax in the rest of the ear passage.
The two major enemies
of the waxy defense system in the outer ear passage are water
and mechanical scratching or rubbing. Once the wax
defenses are broken, certain bacteria begin to invade and create
an alkaline environment which makes the ear weep and become
itchy. Usually, this results in more scratching.
The first symptom of this condition is
excess wax formation. This is a natural attempt by the ear to
protect itself. Sooner or later, the wax glands become exhausted
and the ear is super clean. It also itches. The irresistible
urge to rub the ear now sets the ear up to be invaded by
bacteria and it becomes moist and swollen. Finally, the repeated
cycles of infection make the ear passage scar down and close.
The best way to avoid
this disorder and the simplest way to reverse it once it begins
is by avoiding anything that wets the ear or touches or rubs the
inside of the ear. Wax should be removed only from the
outermost edge of the ear passage. Cotton-tipped applicators
will only push wax further down into the ear passage where it
will accumulate and overload the transportation mechanism.
Swimmers need only be sure that their ears are perfectly dry
before retiring at night. Ear plugs are not usually
necessary and may even be undesirable. They push the wax further
down inside the ear while at the same time providing a surface
for the constantly moving ear passage to rub against. The
best way to assure that the ear is dry is to use some form of
drying drop which usually consists of some sort of mildly acetic
substance. (Equal parts of rubbing alcohol and white vinegar can
do as a drying drop in a pinch.) A hair dryer works well in
drying the ear. Occasionally, oral antibiotics are
required to control an acute flare-up. We like to avoid
the use of any drops which are available on the market for
dissolving ear wax since our experience has been that these
drops have difficulty telling where the wax stops and your
healthy ear passage begins.
If you find that you have a very hard wax,
then a scheduled visit to the doctor is in order. Hydrogen
peroxide is too watery to use more than rarely and should be
used with specific doctor's instructions. It is helpful to use a
few drops of mineral oil or baby oil at bedtime the night before
the visit.
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| Fluid In The Ear
(Middle Ear Ventilation Problems) |
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The ear passage
is a tunnel at whose end is a thin wall called the ear drum. On
the other side of that ear drum is a space called the middle ear
which normally contains air. The air gets there through a tube
called the eustachian tube, which is normally closed, and which
opens during yawning or swallowing , often causing a
clicking sound. When the tube stops functioning, a vacuum
develops in the ear. Nature responds to the vacuum by secreting
fluid. The fluid may be as thin as water or so thick that we
occasionally call it a glue ear. The degree of hearing loss
caused by fluid varies.. Occasionally, when there is a vacuum in
the ear, the ear drum will be sucked in. When vacuum
persists for years, chronic infection, damage to bone, or
perforations of the ear drum may result.
The tube that lets air into the ear is
partially made out of gristle (cartilage). In children,
this cartilage is very soft and when a small vacuum develops in
the ear, it tends to collapse the cartilage in the same way that
a wet straw collapses when you try to drink through it. The
cartilage firms up with maturity. Heredity seems to
determine the mechanics of the muscles that serve to pull the
tube open. Finally, there is a membrane factor, referred to as
"allergy" which is poorly understood, but is operating at a
biochemical level. Children’s adenoids are said to have some
mechanical affect on the way the tube opens, but their role in
the this process in quite unclear at this time.
Ear ventilation problems generally
begin at about nine months of age, and gradually get worse until
about six to eight years. By puberty the ears improve, and
most chronic ear ventilation problems have almost always
vanished. In adults, the tubes
malfunction during inflammatory conditions
like infection or allergy. Those predisposed to such
problems will experience the most difficulty when challenged by
environmental pressure changes, such as flying or SCUBA diving.
Treatment varies. Decongestants are
frequently offered to improve a borderline tube.
Adenoidectomy is said to improve the mechanics of the eustachian
tube opening. Artificial middle ear ventilating tubes break the
vacuum in the ear responsible for the complications. Ear
ventilating tubes mimic the solution nature sometimes uses...a
hole in the ear drum. As long a s the hole..natural or
artificial..is kept perfectly dry, the ear will rarely get
infected. Artificial tubes usually last about nine months,
though the range can be from two weeks to two years!
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NERVE HEARING LOSS
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The
structures involved in a nerve hearing loss (otherwise called ‘sensorineural’
or ‘perceptive’) include the cochlea and eighth cranial
nerve, are locked away inside the bones at the bottom of the
skull. The sounds of language are coded in high frequencies and
in the low frequencies. When normal hearing people have
difficulty hearing speech sounds in the low frequencies, they
figure them out from what they hear in the high frequencies. In
a noisy background, we count on both.
In addition to affecting the loudness of
hearing, nerve hearing loss produces distortion of the sounds
entering the ear. Someone with this kind of loss may be
aware of sounds, but makes errors deciding exactly what sounds
represent. People with a nerve hearing loss
experience difficulty decoding the
complicated sounds we string together to make speech.
In noisy situations, people with a nerve
hearing loss - which almost always affects the high frequencies
first - have the greatest difficulty.
Until recently, most of these losses were
attributed to "old age". We are now wiser and understand that
the tendency to develop these losses probably runs in families
and is aggravated by the noise pollution in our society. In
fact, the gene for bringing this hearing
loss may be located on the chromosome very
near the gene for longevity, thus explaining why older people so
often have this type of hearing loss. A preventable cause
of such loss is work exposure to loud noises. Certain
medications, occasionally required in the treatment of
life-threatening infections , have been found to damage the
hearing nerve.
The person who has this hearing loss
usually doesn't know it. The damage usually occurs
gradually and since we usually don't know what is going to be
said to us, we can only accept what our ears tell us as the
truth. When hearing deteriorates to a moderately
severe
level we finally become aware what our
ears are telling us can’t possibly be correct. People
who have normal hearing and who know what they and others are
saying know that the person with sensori-neural loss has lost
hearing before they do.
People with a nerve loss have problems
communicating with friends and family. Though they hear
what is being said, they often hear it incorrectly and having a
conversation becomes very difficult. Often, families give up
trying to get through to the person who has a nerve loss.
It is a rare friend who continues to try. For the person
with a nerve hearing loss, a public gathering such as a party or
a performance is a disaster. Often the person with a nerve
hearing loss begins to avoid going into public without realizing
why. The telephone becomes a major source of communications,
since it is easier to understand on the telephone than
face-to-face at an moderate stage of deterioration. This
explains why so many of our senior citizens spend so much time
on the telephone speaking to people whom they could probably
just as easily visit face-to-face.
Through the next few decades, we don't
foresee any readily available surgical or medical treatment for
most nerve hearing losses. The best ways to improve
communications include:
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Controlling the Listening
Situation
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Amplification Devices
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Ear Surgeons Watching Ear
Implants Ear Implants With Great Interest
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| For more information
regarding these topics consult with your ENT specialist. |
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