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 Medical Self-Care: Hearing Loss 
 
American Institute for Preventive Medicine ©
Do people seem to mumble a lot lately? Do you have trouble hearing in church or theaters? Is it hard to pick up what others say at the dinner table or at family gatherings? Does your family ask you to turn down the volume on the TV or radio?

These are signs of gradual, age-related hearing loss called presbycusis. High pitched sounds are the ones to go first. Hearing loss from presbycusis cannot be restored, but hearing aids, along with the Self-Care Tips listed on page 61 can be helpful.

Hearing loss can also result from other things:

  • Acoustic trauma - This may be caused by a blow to the ear or from excessive noise. Excessive noise includes that heard from low-flying airplanes when living near an airport, when flying in an airplane, or when working with heavy, loud machinery.
  • Blood vessel disorders including high blood pressure.
  • A blood clot that travels to nerves in the ear.
  • Ear wax that blocks the ear canal.
  • Chronic middle ear infections, or an infection of the inner ear.
  • Meniere's disease (a disease marked by excess fluid in canals of the inner ear which help maintain balance).
  • Multiple sclerosis.
  • Syphilis.
  • Brain tumor.
Babies and young children should have their hearing checked during routine office visits. You may notice that your child does not hear properly, however, if he/she does not respond to sounds and is not learning to speak as quickly as you think they should. Children can be born with hearing loss or a hearing impairment or develop hearing loss from an ear or upper respiratory infection.


Self-Care Tips
For gradual, age-related hearing loss (presbycusis):
  • Ask people to speak clearly, distinctly, and in a normal tone.
  • Look at people when they are talking to you. Watch their expressions to help you understand what they are saying. Ask them to face you.
  • Try to limit background noise when having a conversation.
  • In a church or theater, sit up front.
  • To rely on sight instead of sound, install a buzzer, flasher, or amplifier on your telephone, door chime, and alarm clock. Also, an audiologist (hearing therapist) may be able to show you other techniques for "training" yourself to hear better.
To Clear Ear Wax: (Use only if you know that the eardrum is not perforated. Check with your doctor if you are in doubt).
  • Lie on your side. Using a syringe or medicine dropper, carefully squeeze a few drops of lukewarm water into your ear (or have someone else do this). Let the water remain there for 10-15 minutes and then shake it out. Do this again, but use a few drops of hydrogen peroxide, mineral oil or an over-the-counter cleaner such as Murine Ear Drops or Debrox. Let the excess fluid flow out of the ear.
  • After several minutes, follow the same procedure using warm water again, letting it remain there for 10-15 minutes. Tilt the head to allow it to drain out of the ear.
You can repeat this entire procedure again in three hours if the ear wax has not cleared.

To prevent hearing loss:

  • Don't put cotton-tipped swabs, fingers, bobby pins, etc. in your ear.
  • Don't blow your nose with too much force. It is better to do so "gently" with a tissue or handkerchief held loosely over the nostrils.
  • Avoid places that have loud noises (airports, construction sites, etc.). Protect your ears with earplugs.
  • Keep the volume on "Walkmans", car stereos, etc., on low. If someone else can hear the music when you have earphones on your head, the volume is too loud.
  • Follow your doctor's advice for disorders that can cause hearing loss (Example: High blood pressure, Meniere's disease, etc.).
  • Avoid prolonged use of medicines that cause hearing loss or overdosing on such medications. (Example: Heavy use of aspirin, streptomycin, quinine).
Also be aware of things that can help you hear sounds if your hearing is impaired.
  • Hearing aids (See your doctor).
  • Devices made to assist in hearing sounds from the TV and radio.
  • Special equipment that can be installed in your telephone by the telephone company.
  • Portable devices made especially to amplify sounds. (These can be used for movies, classes, meetings, etc.).

Questions to Ask
In a child: Does the child not respond to any sound, even a whistle or loud clap? (Did the child's mother have German measles when pregnant with the child)? Does the child not respond to sounds after experiencing any of these things?
  • Recent earache or upper respiratory infection
  • Airplane travel
Yes: See Doctor
No
In a child or adult: Do you have any of the following with the hearing loss?
  • Discharge from the ear
  • Earache
  • Dizziness or feeling that things are spinning around you
  • Recent ear or upper respiratory infection
  • Feeling that the ears are blocked or filled with wax
Yes: See Doctor
No
Can you not hear a regular (non-digital) watch ticking when held next to the ear? Yes: See Doctor
No
Do you hear a ringing sound in one or both ears all of the time? Yes: See Doctor
No
Did you lose your hearing after being exposed to loud noises such as those associated with airplanes, work or hobby related loud noises (i.e., heavy machinery, power tools, firearms, etc.) and has this not gotten better? Yes: Call Doctor
No
Provide Self-Care


Healthy Self: The Guide to Self-Care and Wise Consumerism
© American Institute for Preventive Medicine
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