My mother has it. She got it when she was 25. I got it the same age... coincidence? perhaps. But I believe that it is genetically passed on.
I hope not... I don't want my kids to go through this at all!!!! Praying they wont!
As of right now, there is no way it's because of our Genes. Noise is the number one reason for most cases of Tinnitus. Sounds are EVERYWHERE in life. Our auditory system is extremely fragile and was not made to take the beating that it does everyday whether it be from loud traffic to cabinet doors slamming to dishes clinking and clanking. Sound waves can cause hidden damage to our hearing system. We as humans were meant to live in a fight or flight scenario where we would hunt for food or have to protect ourselves from danger throughout the night. We needed a healthy hearing system that allowed us to hear the faintest of sounds and from far distances to be prepared for action. Any who..........Tinnitus is the problem to an underlying cause that MOST researchers have yet to even come across. There are only are few studies out there explaining the reason we get tinnitus. Tinnitus is only diagnosed if we hear a ringing in our brain. The same factors that apply to tinnitus apply to age-related hearing loss. We are missing the big picture and what these things can do over time. Maybe it'll be proved that Genes cause a faulty working in our hearing system but that's very far-fetched.After i had T, i discovered that three other close relatives have mild Tinnitus. Anyone else have relatives with T?
Maybe it'll be proved that Genes cause a faulty working in our hearing system but that's very far-fetched.
Thanks for sending this Aaron. I'll read into the links you posted. The issue I was referring to is Tinnitus and how people don't always connect hearing with the symptom. Do you agree that Tinnitus is in association with hidden hearing loss?There is definitely evidence that genes play a role in hearing loss. I believe there are upwards of 100 genes that have been implicated in some type of hearing loss. (Here's a hearing loss specific genetic test for 87 different genes http://personalizedmedicine.partner...ar-Medicine/Tests/Hearing-Loss/OtoGenome.aspx) The most obvious example where genetics plays a causal role is when babies are born with a significant hearing impairment, and most of the links that come up when searching for genetics and hearing loss focus on that though there is some information relevant to adults.
There is general information on genetics and hearing loss/deafness at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK1434/ among other places. See also http://hereditaryhearingloss.org/main.aspx?c=.HHH&n=86162 for more data.
As the authors of the paper in the nih link note, most acquired hearing loss is age or noise related though they provide citations to two studies linking specific genes to age and noise related hearing loss. They also posit there is likely a relationship between genetics and age/noise related hearing loss. After all, many people here self-identify as having "sensitive ears". Assuming they are correct, it seems likely that genetics play a role. (What's the saying, "genetics loads the gun and environment pulls the trigger".)
Finally, if you look at Table 3 in the paper I linked (nih website), even though most of these conditions are prelingual, some genes are associated with hearing loss in the second through sixth decade of life. Interestingly a couple of these take the pattern of high frequency progressive hearing loss.
My dad has tinnitus although I never knew that before I developed T. My cousin on my dads side also has it and my aunt (dad's sister) had it when she was younger but it went away. My grandma on my moms side also suffers with it.After i had T, i discovered that three other close relatives have mild Tinnitus. Anyone else have relatives with T?