Hearing Aids and Hearing Loss
from National
Institutes of Health
How Hearing Aids workA Hearing Aid is an electronic, battery-operated
device that amplifies and changes sound to allow for improved communication.
Hearing Aids receive sound through a microphone, which then converts the sound
waves to electrical signals. The Hearing Aid's amplifier increases the loudness of the signals
and then sends the sound to the ear through a speaker.
How Common Is Hearing Loss and What Causes Hearing Loss? Approximately 28
million Americans have a hearing impairment. Hearing Loss is one of the most
prevalent chronic health conditions in the United States, affecting people of
all ages, in all segments of the population, and across all socioeconomic
levels. Hearing Loss affects approximately 17 in 1,000 children under age 18.
Incidence increases with age: approximately 314 in 1,000 people over age 65 have
Hearing Loss.
Hearing Loss can be
hereditary, from disease, trauma, or long-term exposure to
damaging noise or even certain medications. Hearing Loss can vary from a mild but important
loss of sensitivity, to a total loss of hearing.
Your hearing depends on the following series of events that change sound waves in
the air into electrical impulses that your auditory (hearing) nerve carries directly to
your brain. Your ear has three major parts, commonly know as the outer ear, middle
ear, and inner ear.
- Sound waves enter the outer ear (pinna) and travel through a narrow tube
(ear canal) that leads inside the ear to your eardrum (tympanic membrane). Your
eardrum will vibrate from the incoming sound waves and transmit these vibrations
through 3 tiny bones called the ossicles (incus, stapes and malleus) in
your middle ear. They amplify the sound and send it through the entrance to your
inner ear (oval window) and into the cochlea (its the fluid-filled hearing organ).
- The vibrations create ripples in the fluid that bend projections from tiny
hair cells in the cochlea, causing electrical impulses that the auditory nerve,
or eighth cranial nerve, sends to the brain.
- Your will brain translate these impulses into what we know as
sounds.
There are different types of Hearing Loss. Conductive Hearing Loss occurs
when sound waves are prevented from passing to the inner ear. This can be caused
by a variety of problems including buildup of earwax (cerumen), infection, fluid
in the middle ear (ear infection or otitis media), or a punctured eardrum.
Sensorineural (nerve) Hearing Loss develops when the auditory nerve or hair
cells in the inner ear are damaged by aging, noise, illness, injury, infection,
head trauma, toxic medications, or an inherited condition. Mixed Hearing Loss is
a combination of both conductive and sensorineural Hearing Loss. A conductive
Hearing Loss can often be corrected with medical or surgical treatment, while
sensorineural Hearing Loss usually cannot be reversed.
People with Hearing Loss may experience some or all of the following
problems:
- Difficulty hearing conversations, especially when there is background noise.
- Hissing, roaring, or ringing in the ears (tinnitus).
- Difficulty hearing the television or radio at a normal volume.
- Fatigue and irritation caused by the effort to hear.
- Dizziness or problems with balance.
How Can I Find Out if I Have Hearing Loss? If you think you might
have Hearing Loss, check out Lloyds Hearing Aids,
for a FREE Hearing Test.
Lloyds Hearing Aids may refer you to an
otolaryngologist or audiologist. An otolaryngologist is a physician who
specializes in ear, nose, and throat disorders, and will investigate the cause
of the Hearing Loss. An audiologist is a hearing health professional who
identifies and measures Hearing Loss and will perform a Hearing test to assess
the type and degree of Hearing Loss.
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