My ears are a little deaf, what should I do?

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Deafness refers to organic or functional abnormalities at all levels in the nerve centers of sound transmission, perception, and comprehensive analysis of sound in the auditory system, resulting in varying degrees of hearing loss.


What should I do if I am a little deaf?
There is no fundamentally effective treatment for neurological deafness. It is recommended that you go for a check-up when you have time, and we will provide you with a detailed analysis of your hearing based on your hearing situation, so that you can correctly understand your hearing. In addition, good hearing aids and a healthy body will not worsen hearing, but will improve the resolution of hearing. Therefore, once deafness is discovered, timely intervention is required.


Let you quickly understand deafness
1. Causes

1. Noise-induced deafness: The degree of deafness is mainly related to the noise intensity and exposure time, and secondly to the noise spectrum, Individual differences also have a certain relationship.

2. Traumatic deafness: Craniocerebral trauma and temporal bone fractures damage the inner ear structure, causing inner ear bleeding, or inner ear damage caused by strong shocks, which can lead to sensorineural deafness.
3. Drug-toxic deafness: Drug-toxic deafness is bilateral, often accompanied by tinnitus, and vestibular function may also be damaged.
4. Presbycusis: It is mostly caused by arteriosclerosis and bone hyperplasia in old age, which leads to insufficient blood supply to the spiral organ hair cells and spiral ganglia, leading to degenerative disease or central nervous system decline, leading to hearing loss.
5. Sudden deafness: It is a sensorineural hearing loss that occurs suddenly and has unknown cause. The lesions may involve the spiral organ, or even rupture of the vestibular membrane and cochlear window membrane.

2. Symptoms
1. Noise-induced deafness: high-pitched tinnitus, hearing loss, accompanied by dizziness and headache.
2. Traumatic deafness: hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo, ear blockage, nystagmus.
3. Drug poisoning deafness: headache, dizziness, deafness, hearing loss, and dizziness.

4. Presbycusis: tinnitus and vertigo, inability to concentrate on hearing, speaking loudly, and often increasing the volume when watching TV or listening to the radio.

3. Treatment

1. Drug treatment: Drug treatment generally uses pure Chinese patent medicine formulas, traditional syndrome differentiation and targeted treatment.
2. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can be tried: Hyperbaric oxygen has a significant effect on the hearing recovery and improvement of accompanying symptoms in patients with sudden deafness.
3. Hearing aid therapy: Wearing hearing aids can improve the patient's hearing condition.
4. Electronic cochlear implantation: For cochlear deafness, electronic cochlear implantation can be considered.
5. Surgical treatment: Surgical treatment is generally not recommended when it is absolutely necessary.

6. Habituation therapy: a new high-tech platform for clinical diagnosis that integrates diagnosis and treatment of tinnitus and deafness, patient management and consultation.

DeafnessThe more severe the degree, the more obvious the language barrier. Hearing loss below 25dB generally has no language barrier and will not affect normal language communication.
* People with an average hearing loss of 26 to 40dB have no difficulty hearing ordinary speech sounds, but they will find it difficult to listen in situations where many people are in meetings. Smaller sounds are difficult to hear, such as high frequencies that are significantly reduced. , this situation is more prominent. If infants and young children have this kind of hearing loss, it will affect the development of language and intelligence to varying degrees.
* The average hearing loss is 41-55dB. It will be difficult to hear speech at normal volume. If it occurs in infants and young children, it can cause language development delay and affect the language learning of young children.
* The average hearing loss is 56-70dB, and it is difficult to hear loud speeches. If it occurs in infants and young children, it can cause significant delay in language development and abnormal pronunciation.

* The average hearing loss is 71 to 90dB. You can perceive loud sounds, but you cannot distinguish speech sounds, which can lead to speech disorders.