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March 18, 2011
In Today's Issue
- Burn Off 10% Of Unwanted Body Fat In The Next 30 Days...
- Little Known Ailment Common Among Middle Aged...
- Weight Loss Expert Loses 70lbs of Ugly Fat...
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Little Known Ailment Common Among Middle Aged...
Dear Reader,
Oh the joys of aging... a new report appearing online in the Archives of Otolaryngology - Head & Neck Surgery finds that an estimated 21% of American adults 48 to 59 years old have some type of hearing loss. What's worse, the number jumps to 90% by the time people reach 80 and older.
Loss of hearing makes it hard to communicate with those around you, leading to a far poorer quality of life, and can possibly hasten the development of dementia and other cognitive issues according to the authors of this study.
Doctors know that hearing loss can be the result of heredity or chronic exposure to overloud sounds, but this team of researchers identified yet another factor involved in hearing loss - heart disease.
Why? Lead researcher Scott D. Nash, M.S. out of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health believes one reason may be the disruptions to blood flow that happen as part of heart disease. This could allow less oxygen to reach the inner ear, or other portions of the auditory pathway, and without oxygen the cells die out, no longer functioning as they should. Recent estimates have almost 29 million Americans having a measurable hearing impairment.
To conduct this research, Nash and his team collected data on 3,285 adults (average age 49) who took part in the Beaver Dam Offspring Study, a work that examines aging and its affects on the body.
Researchers measured hearing loss as the ability to hear certain tones, the ability to recognize words spoken at different sound levels, and the ability to hear words said by both male and female voices.
There was some level of hearing loss in 14.1% of the participants. Noisy environments impacted the ability of the subjects to hear words spoken quietly - only 63.5% of the subjects could do this.
Most common among men and the less educated, hearing loss was found to affect those who worked in a loud environment, as well as those who'd had previous ear surgeries. When a parent had hearing problems, their children had a much higher risk of the same since this condition has a significant hereditary component.
Continues below...
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Little Known Ailment Common Among Middle Aged... Continued...
Trouble is, our world is getting noisier by the minute. Director of the University
of Miami Ear Institute, Dr. Thomas Balkany believes the increasing sound that's
a natural, unavoidable part of the world we live in... workplace sound, traffic
noise, jackhammers, sirens and such, are the reason so many more of us are losing
our hearing, especially those at lower social and educational levels. They're
simply exposed to louder noises for longer periods of time.
Living a healthier lifestyle helps reduce the chances of cardiovascular disease
(not to mention other dangerous chronic conditions), and may well have an impact
on hearing loss, delaying or perhaps preventing it altogether. The way you live
now - what you eat, how much you exercise, how must rest you get - certainly
impacts your body, so why not your hearing as well?
And while hearing loss can't be reversed, there are things you can do to improve
what you hear. Hearing aids have come a long way. There are also cochlear implants
for severe hearing loss. You might also work on ways to manage your hearing loss
and still communicate - chose quiet places, ask others to speak clearly, turn
off the background noise and directly face the person you're talking to - all
will help you hear more clearly and participate more fully.
To your good health,
Kirsten Whittaker
Daily Health Bulletin Editor
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Sources:
http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=126205
Mayo Clinic info on hearing loss: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/hearing-loss/DS00172
MedHelp hearing loss community: http://www.medhelp.org/forums/Hearing-Loss/show/177
Mayo Clinic info on coping and support: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/hearing-loss/DS00172/DSECTION=coping%2Dand%2Dsupport
Thomas Balkany, M.D., University of Miami Ear Institute; chairman, department of otolaryngology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine: http://alumni.med.miami.edu/x46.xml
Feb. 21, 2011, Archives of Otolaryngology - Head & Neck Surgery, online: http://pubs.ama-assn.org/media/2011a/0221.dtl#5
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