Many U.S. Kids May Have Noise-Related Hearing Loss
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A substantial number of American children and teens may be sustaining hearing damage that school-age screening might not pick up, according to a national study of more than 5,200 6- to 19-year-olds.
Researchers found that more than 12% of the children had hearing damage known as noise-induced hearing threshold shifts, or NITS. The condition refers to a change in the threshold beyond which a person cannot hear clearly. In everyday life, it can amount to problems such as having trouble hearing normal conversation amid background noise.
The current findings, published in the July issue of Pediatrics, suggest that more than 5 million American children and teens may be affected by NITS in one or both ears.1937
In addition, most of the affected children in the study had hearing damage in a frequency range not typically tested in school-age children, report researchers led by Amanda Sue Niskar of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (news - web sites) in Atlanta, Georgia.
The study was based on household interviews and hearing tests conducted between 1988 and 1994. Niskar‘s team found that of the children with NITS, the majority had only slight hearing damage, while 5% had ``moderate to profound‘‘ damage. NITS was more common among teens, with nearly 16% of 12- to 19-year-olds affected. Close to 9% of younger children showed some hearing damage.
``These results,‘‘ Niskar and her colleagues write, ``suggest that children are being exposed to hazardous levels of noise, and children‘s hearing levels are vulnerable to these exposures.‘‘
While the researchers could not determine the sources of NITS among these children, they note that airplanes, firearms, power tools, stereos and even toys have decibel levels that can damage hearing.
Also unknown is whether these hearing problems were temporary or permanent. Continued exposure to excessive noise can make NITS progressively worsen, Niskar and her colleagues point out. On the other hand, adults have been shown to recover from temporary NITS within minutes or weeks of getting away from the auditory assault.
``The resiliency of a child‘s auditory system with respect to noise exposure is unknown and should be a topic of additional investigation,‘‘ the authors write.
But since NITS is preventable, they conclude that protecting children from hearing damage in the first place should be a priority.