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Auditory Effects of Noise

Auditory Effects of Noise
"""What types of health consequences might exposure to noise have?

Non-auditory effects of noise exposure include stress, associated physiological and behavioral effects, and safety concerns. Auditory effects of noise exposure include hearing impairment as a result of excessive noise exposure. Noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) is the main concern related to occupational noise exposure.

What are some instances of how hearing affects health?

The main auditory effects are as follows: Tinnitus: Ringing or buzzing in the ears. Temporary hearing loss: Also known as temporary threshold shift (TTS) which occurs immediately after exposure to a high level of noise. There is gradual recovery when the affected person spends time in a quiet environment. Complete recovery may take several hours or days (up to 48 hours). Acoustic trauma: Sudden hearing damage caused by short burst of extremely loud noise, such as a gunshot.

What traits define permanent hearing loss brought on by noise?

The main characteristics of noise-induced hearing loss include: Noise exposure can cause a permanent hearing loss that may affect speech communication; Noise-induced hearing loss is a cumulative process; factors that determine hearing loss include overall noise levels; noise composition; exposure time over a typical work day; and the worker's work history (days, weeks, years).

Does hearing decline with age?

Age-related hearing loss adds to noise-induced hearing loss, which means that hearing ability may continue to deteriorate even after a person stops working in a noisy environment. This medical condition is known as presbycusis. Again, like noise-induced hearing loss, everyone is not affected equally.

What additional factors contribute to hearing loss?

Noise damages the hearing organs (cochlea) in the inner ear, which is why noise-induced hearing loss is a sensory-neural type of hearing loss. Certain medications and diseases may also damage the inner ear, resulting in hearing loss. Generally, it is not possible to distinguish between sensory-neural hearing loss caused by exposure to noise and sensory-neural hearing loss due to other causes. Medical judgement, in such cases, is based on the noise exposure his.

How are hearing losses assessed?

The average hearing threshold level of a typical young adult with healthy ears is 0 decibels (dB); the PTS (permanent threshold shift), as measured by audiometry, is the dB level of sounds of various frequencies that are just barely audible to that person. A positive threshold shift represents hearing loss and a negative threshold shift represents hearing gain.""" - https://www.affordablecebu.com/
 

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"Auditory Effects of Noise" was written by Mary under the Health category. It has been read 256 times and generated 0 comments. The article was created on and updated on 15 January 2023.
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