- Author:
Sang Hoon KIM
1
;
Seung Geun YEO
Author Information
- Publication Type:Review
- Keywords: Presbycusis; Hearing Loss; Hearing Aids; Rehabilitation
- MeSH: Adult; Aged; Communication; Correction of Hearing Impairment; Delivery of Health Care; Depression; Diet; DNA; Ear; Hearing; Hearing Aids; Hearing Loss; Humans; Hypertension; Metabolic Diseases; Mitochondria; Noise; Presbycusis*; Quality of Life; Rehabilitation; Social Isolation
- From:Hanyang Medical Reviews 2015;35(2):78-83
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
- Abstract: Presbycusis is gradual hearing loss in both ears that commonly occurs as people age. Presbycusis is a complex phenomenon characterized by audiometric threshold shift, deterioration in speech-understanding and speech-perception difficulties in a noisy environment. Factors contributing to presbycusis include mitochondria DNA mutation, genetic disorders, hypertension, diabetes, metabolic disease and other systemic diseases in the intrinsic aspects. Extrinsic factors include noise, ototoxic medication and diet. However, presbycusis may not be related to the intrinsic and extrinsic factors separately. Presbycusis can greatly affect one's quality of life; impaired hearing restricts communication and untreated presbycusis could result in social isolation and even depression. Current amplification methods related to auditory rehabilitation can provide improved communication ability to users. Nevertheless, only a minority of elderly people with impaired hearing use hearing aids. The purpose of this review is to raise the awareness of presbycusis, to update our current understanding of presbycusis with a focus on age-related deficits in auditory and cognitive processing of speech and to explore strategies of prevention, identification, amplification, and aural rehabilitation. The ultimate goal is to improve the quality of hearing health care and the overall quality of life of older adults.