Hi Guys,
I just went to Boots to get fitted for ACS Custom earplugs. They said due to the pressure in my right ear that they couldn't fit them. However, since I was there, they said that they would do a hearing test.
I had my hearing tested in July 2021 and my hearing was within normal ranges but now I have significant hearing loss. I have no idea how this happened. What do you think? Was my tinnitus just a precursor to the hearing loss?
This is my audiogram now. I'm in complete shock. Only just turned 30.
View attachment 48651
I would not say that's "significant" hearing loss, but I bet sometimes you have trouble with speech in noise or the "cocktail party" effect. It's enough loss to make your ears and brain work more, and work harden when decoding sound; that sort of work will get you tired at the end of a long day.
If you have sensorineural hearing loss, the perceived
quality of your hearing may depend on whether the
hair cells for the damaged frequencies (those after 2 kHz, where your audiogram drops)
are amplifying sound or not. This is a bit hard to explain, but basically if you are in an empty and silent room and can hear sharply a clock ticking, or there is sharpness in the sound of an aircon machine, you should be fine.
On the contrary if there is like a
void of sound in those situations, or the sound is perceived dimmed,
flat or devoid of richness, then things are not going well...
The drop at 4 kHz may be related to noise trauma. Do you remember any episode with loud noise that could have produced that?
My audiogram is similar to yours in the high frequencies. These are some considerations:
- The decibel scale is logarithmic, so the first 10 dB of loss are not the same in terms of volume than the next 10 dB, 20 dB, 50 dB. The lower it gets, a larger chunk of "volume" is lost. It is a logarithmic curve.
- In my case I can feel very different from one day to another, having a similar audiogram. So let's say your audiogram at 6 kHz (
input of sound) is more or less the same than last month but somehow the perceived
quality of sound is much worse... so similar audiograms, very different perceived quality of sound.
- Speech is at the medium range of the frequency range, so you should be ok with it for now. The more background noise there is, the more complicated it will be to understand what it is said.
- High frequencies are key to discriminating sounds or speech in noise. So with an audiogram that drops at high frequencies it should be harder to make out the different instruments of a song, or a classical music piece, or to appreciate the different layers of sound.