Hearing Loss - Your Race May Be To Blame

June 1, 2011

Otologists found that African American adults are much less likely than Caucasians to experience hearing problems. Researchers believe that the skin pigment called melanin, which is produced by skin cells and the inner ear, may protect the inner ear from damage that could result in hearing loss. Dark skin pigments indicate higher levels of melanin are being produced by skin cells. Experts hope that this finding could lead to better drugs targeted at hearing loss and the inner ear.

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ABOUT HEARING LOSS: Loud sounds can stress and damage the delicate hair cells in the inner ear that convert mechanical vibrations in the air (sound) into the electrical signals that the brain interprets as sound. If exposed to loud noises for a long time, the hair cells can become permanently damaged, producing hearing loss. Noise-induced hearing loss can be caused by two types of noise: sudden bursts, such as firearms or fireworks; or continuous exposure to loud noise, such as motorized recreational vehicles, loud sporting events, power tools, farming equipment, or amplified music. For a person to lose their hearing because of continuous exposure, it would depend on how loud the sound was and how often and for how long they heard it. It takes repeated exposures over many years to cause a noise-induced hearing loss in both children and adults.

ABOUT THE EAR: The human ear has three primary sections: the outer, middle and inner ear. All three work together to help the body detect and process sound. Sound is simply vibrations in the air. The outer ear picks up sound waves, which travel through the outer ear canal and strike the eardrum. When this happens, the drum begins to vibrate in response. This in turn moves three tiny bones, called the hammer, the anvil and the stirrup. They help transmit the sound vibrations to the inner ear, which is filled with liquid and lined with thousands of tiny hairs that move in response to the sound vibrations. This changes the vibrations into nerve signals, so the brain can recognize and interpret them.

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Hearing Loss Seems to Affect Fewer Blacks Than Whites

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Frank R. Lin, M.D. Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Division of Otology, Neurotology, and Skull Base Surgery
Johns Hopkins Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery
flin1@jhmi.edu