Are Your Patients Aware That Hearing Loss May Affect the Brain?

— Patients of all ages need to be better informed of the risks and interventions available

by Shannon Halloway, PhD, RN April 4, 2023

Over the past few months, I noticed my husband inching the volume up on his phone or TV. Or I’d see him struggling to hear and understand his friends while chatting in bustling restaurants. But since my husband is only in his late 30s, I was shocked when he was unexpectedly diagnosed with moderate hearing impairment. My husband is not alone: Over 1.5 billion (or nearly 20% of the global population) live with a hearing impairment, and this prevalence continues to grow, including in young to middle-age adults.

My husband is fortunate to have access to great medical care and resources for managing his hearing. But even after a formal diagnosis, he was completely unaware about the deleterious effects of hearing impairment on other areas of health, specifically the brain. As a nurse scientist focused on health behaviors and cognition, I understand the significant roles lifestyle and chronic health conditions have in overall brain health and dementia risk. Nonetheless, I was surprised that his healthcare team did not mention how hearing impairment can negatively impact the brain, even in midlife.

Hearing Impairment and Dementia Risk

Globally, hearing impairment in early adulthood or midlife is the single greatest risk factor for dementia. Dementia, the devastating chronic decline of mental processes, affects over 55 million adults globally. Hearing loss is the top modifiable risk factor for dementia prevention and is linked with over 8% of dementia cases globally. This means that a staggering 800,000 new cases of dementia each year are attributable to hearing impairment.

Our understanding of the exact mechanisms through which hearing impairment contributes to the development of dementia is still emerging, making patient education admittedly very difficult. Since hearing loss can be attributed to a variety of factors across the lifespan (such as genetic factors, infections, chronic diseases, and environmental drivers), it is difficult to determine how it develops. But regardless of the initial cause, hearing impairment in midlife has been shown to be related to decreased brain volume. Changes in brain structure can occur years or decades before changes to memory, thinking, or attention. Another theory is that hearing impairment can lead to a natural deterioration in one’s ability to socialize and maintain relationships. Hearing impairment could also impact the ability to engage in other enriching activities that are known to benefit long-term brain health, such as learning a new language, attending lectures, playing games, or playing an instrument.

Strategies to Mitigate Risk

Luckily, there are hearing intervention strategies to offer patients to mitigate dementia risk. Most promising is providing hearing aids in those with mild-to-moderate hearing impairment, similar to what is being tested in an ongoing trial and shown effective in smaller studies. However, hearing aids are not a simple solution. Hearing aids are wildly expensive and even with insurance or Medicare, accessibility is a major barrier. Besides cost, the stigma of hearing aids is incredibly pervasivespanning all age and gender groups. Many adults report that they don’t want to use the hearing aids due to this stigma, even when hearing aids are recommended as a result of known hearing impairment. However, this may improve over time due to evolving technology that makes hearing aids more useful and nearly invisible to others.

To complement hearing interventions, clinicians can also suggest participation in enriching activities. Research supports physical, cognitive, and social activities to help bolster cognitive reserveor the ability to maintain memory or thinking despite injury or insult to the brain. Luckily, many activities that clinicians can recommend to boost cognitive reserve also support overall health and wellness. Clinicians can suggest low-cost or free activities, including brisk walking, crafts, socializing with loved ones, reading, or puzzles.

Hearing impairment is a highly prevalent health condition with serious consequences for brain health, and your patients are likely uninformed. Clinicians that treat adults — of any age — should be knowledgeable about the early symptoms of hearing impairment and assess risk factors for hearing loss (e.g., family history, exposure). Clinicians should encourage patients with hearing impairment to seek out hearing interventions. They should emphasize that newer technology allows for hearing aids to be smaller, use Bluetooth to connect with smart phones, and have built-in trackers to prevent losing them. Patients should be encouraged to engage in activities they enjoy that also support cognitive reserve across the lifespan.

We must better inform our patients about the dementia risk that accompanies hearing loss, while emphasizing that promising strategies and interventions are available.

Shannon Halloway, PhD, RN, is an associate professor and the Heung Soo & Mi Ja Kim Endowed Faculty Scholar at the University of Illinois Chicago. She is the principal investigator of the MindMoves trial that tests lifestyle interventions to prevent memory loss, and is a former Public Voices Fellow of the OpEd Project.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
The Scientific Reason Why Rain Can Really Dampen Your Mood thumbnail

The Scientific Reason Why Rain Can Really Dampen Your Mood

After an oddly dry summer, parts of the US are experiencing record-breaking rain this fall—and it’s not even November yet. Mississippi, Nevada, and Louisiana just had some of their wettest weather on record. Arizona and New Mexico are dealing with historically wet monsoons, and Hurricane Ian dumped buckets of rain on Florida before causing a
Read More
IV Hyperimmune Immunoglobulin No Help in Severe COVID thumbnail

IV Hyperimmune Immunoglobulin No Help in Severe COVID

Hyperimmune intravenous immunoglobulin (hIVIG) added to standard of care, including remdesivir (Veklury), did not improve clinical outcomes among hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19, a randomized trial found. People given hIVIG had no better chance of a better clinical outcome at day 7 compared with those assigned placebo (adjusted OR 1.06, 95% CI 0.77-1.45), reported Mark…
Read More
New AI Listens to Toilet Sounds to Detect Diarrhea thumbnail

New AI Listens to Toilet Sounds to Detect Diarrhea

Please enable cookies. Error 1005 Ray ID: 7904cdad8ec0f4a4 • 2023-01-27 22:07:49 UTC What happened? The owner of this website (www.webmd.com) has banned the autonomous system number (ASN) your IP address is in (47583) from accessing this website. Was this page helpful? Thank you for your feedback! Cloudflare Ray ID: 7904cdad8ec0f4a4 • Your IP: 217.21.81.33 •
Read More
The Union is postponing the power struggle thumbnail

The Union is postponing the power struggle

Ein Kompromiss beim Fraktionsvorsitz verhindert eine drohende Kampfkandidatur. Die Abgeordneten geben dem angeschlagenen CDU-Chef Armin Laschet ein wackliges Mandat für Sondierungen mit Grünen und FDP. Der CDU-Chef Armin Laschet hat sich mit der Fraktionssitzung von CDU und CSU vom Dienstag eine politische Atempause verschafft. Clemens Bilan / EPACDU und CSU haben einen Machtkampf in der…
Read More
Thriving with a rare disorder thumbnail

Thriving with a rare disorder

At first glance, nobody can tell all the struggles I’ve endured in an era that is all about image. While genetic disorders affect individuals in rare cases, intellectual disabilities, depression and anxiety occur most frequently in men and women. These conditions are only some of the health issues I regularly face. In retrospect, I shouldn’t
Read More
WA's East Metropolitan Health begins rollout of wearable tech for remote ED patient monitoring thumbnail

WA’s East Metropolitan Health begins rollout of wearable tech for remote ED patient monitoring

Wearable devices are being deployed across emergency departments in East Metropolitan Health, beginning with implementation at Armadale Hospital. The technology rollout is being introduced as part of the Health in a Virtual Environment service. It is being formally introduced first at Armadale Hospital following trials at Royal Perth Hospital (RPH) and Bentley Hospital. The ED
Read More
Index Of News
Consider making some contribution to keep us going. We are donation based team who works to bring the best content to the readers. Every donation matters.
Donate Now

Subscription Form

Liking our Index Of News so far? Would you like to subscribe to receive news updates daily?

Total
0
Share