Acquired hearing loss defines any kind of hearing loss that occurs at some point in the life of a person that was born normal. It may have multiple causes such as various diseases, infections, injuries or excessive exposure to loud noises. Ear infections and infectious diseases are potentially very dangerous and should be treated as soon as they occur, and that’s why parents need to observe their children and take them to a doctor when noticing anything unusual like inflammations or viral symptoms. However, maybe the most common cause for an acquired hearing loss is noise exposure for longer periods of time.
Adults and elders are most affected, and they may become anxious or depressive, because they find it difficult to adapt to their new condition. It’s not easy to either guess what others are saying to you or to ask them to repeat everything until you get it. While in the case of eyesight impairment, wearing glasses or contacts seems the most normal thing of all and nobody feels shameful, when it comes to hearing aids, people get shy and reluctant in wearing them, because they’d be perceived as being handicapped. That’s where hearing aids manufacturers help their clients to mask their instruments, by making them as small as technology permits and as stylish as possible. When suspecting an acquired hearing loss, anybody should go to the doctor, because some of them are reversible when treated from the incipient stage. It can be as simple as unclogging your ear canals from the earwax buildups that accumulate and cause conductive hearing loss. Although there are devices which enable you to perform this sort of ear canal cleansing at home, it would be advisable that you have it done in a medical environment, because the eardrum is extremely sensitive and you may easily harm it if you don’t know what you’re doing. You don’t want to end up with an acquired hearing loss that gets permanent, would you?
I think you have done pretty well.
Posted by Hearing Aid Ratings | 03. Nov, 2009, 8:42 pmI have hearing loss due to Menier’s. Ringing in ear. Can’t hear high tones and have lost 30% of hearing in one ear. Which hearing aid would work best for me?
Posted by Lisa West | 27. Dec, 2009, 9:31 pm