WASHINGTON: A new study of twins has revealed that genes play a
significant role in the level of hearing loss that often appears in late middle
age.
Researchers from the Brandeis University examined genetic and environmental
factors affecting hearing loss in the frequency range of speech recognition.
“This research confirms the importance of genetic factors in age-associated
hearing loss, and the need for vulnerable individuals and their families to take
extra care to prevent further hearing damage,” said lead author Brandeis
neuroscientist Arthur Wingfield.
The study has recommended that middle-aged and older people with a genetic
vulnerability to hearing loss should be particularly careful about environmental
risk factors such as harmful noise and medications whose side-effects could be
detrimental to hearing.
For the study, researchers examined 179 identical and 150 fraternal male twin
pairs, ranging in age from 52 to 60 years, as part of the Viet Nam Era Twin
Study of Aging (VETSA).
About two-thirds of the hearing loss in the individual subjects’ better ears
could be accounted for by genetic factors. In the subjects’ poorer ears, about
one-half of the hearing loss was due to genes, the study showed.
Wingfield said that even mild hearing loss can indirectly lead to declines in
cognitive performance because intellectual energy normally reserved for
higher-level comprehension must be directed toward perceptual effort for
accurately hearing speech.
Hearing loss is the third most common chronic disability among older adults
after arthritis and hypertension. The study is published in the Journal of
Gerontology: Medical Sciences.