Hearing Problems Linked To Mental Decline And Memory Loss In Old Age

Being hard of hearing can increase the speed at which thinking and memory deteriorates with age, a study has shown. Over a period of six years, volunteers with hearing loss were found to have a rate of mental decline up to 40% faster than those who could hear normally. Levels of declining brain function were directly related to the amount of hearing loss, said the researchers. On average, older adults with hearing loss developed significant mental impairment 3.2 years sooner than individuals whose hearing was sound. Almost 2,000 men and women between the ages of 75 and 84 took part in the research, part of an investigation called the Health, Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC) study. All were given hearing tests which involved listening to a range of soft and loud sounds in a soundproof room. Hearing loss is defined as only being able to recognise sounds louder than 25 decibels. The volunteers also had their brain function assessed using standard tests of memory and thinking ability. None had any evidence of mental decline when the study began in 2001. Poor hearing may also force the brain to devote too much of its energy to processing sound, at the expense of memory and thinking. Another possibility is that some common underlying form of neurological damage leads both to hearing loss and mental problems, said Dr Lin.