The ear is the organ of hearing and balance. The parts of the ear include:
- Malleus, Incus and Stapes
Hearing starts with the outer ear. When a sound is made outside the outer ear, the sound waves, or vibrations, travel down the external auditory canal and strike the eardrum (tympanic membrane). The eardrum vibrates. The vibrations are then passed to three tiny bones in the middle ear called the ossicles. The ossicles amplify the sound and send the sound waves to the inner ear and into the fluid-filled hearing organ (cochlea).
Once the sound waves reach the inner ear, they are converted into electrical impulses, which the auditory nerve sends to the brain. The brain then translates these electrical impulses as sound.
A person may be born with hearing difficulties, or they may be acquired due to multiple factors.
Hearing tests should always be performed by an experienced audiologist (a professional specialized in hearing), who will test hearing in order to determine the type, cause and severity. These tests vary according to the patient’s age and needs. The results are then discussed with the patient and/or their family.
The degrees of hearing loss vary from a mild hearing loss (affecting one’s ability to hear soft sounds) to a moderate, severe or even profound hearing loss (where the individual cannot hear most sounds).
Hearing loss also has types, according to the affected part of the ear. These include:
Any problem in the outer or middle ear that prevents sound waves from travelling naturally to the inner ear is known as a conductive hearing loss. Conductive hearing losses are usually mild or moderate in degree.
Which results from missing or damaged sensory cells (hair cells) in the cochlea (our snail shaped hearing organ) or neural hearing loss and is usually permanent. Sensorineural hearing loss can be mild, moderate, severe or profound.
This is a combination of a sensorineural and conductive hearing loss. It results from complications in both the inner and outer or middle ear.
The least common of hearing loss types, resulting from the absence, damage or malfunction of the auditory nerve.
A person may be born with hearing difficulties, or they may be acquired due to multiple factors.
Hearing tests should always be performed by an experienced audiologist (a professional specialized in hearing), who will test hearing in order to determine the type, cause and severity. These tests vary according to the patient’s age and needs. The results are then discussed with the patient and/or their family.
The degrees of hearing loss vary from a mild hearing loss (affecting one’s ability to hear soft sounds) to a moderate, severe or even profound hearing loss (where the individual cannot hear most sounds).
Hearing loss also has types, according to the affected part of the ear. These include:
Any problem in the outer or middle ear that prevents sound waves from travelling naturally to the inner ear is known as a conductive hearing loss. Conductive hearing losses are usually mild or moderate in degree.
Which results from missing or damaged sensory cells (hair cells) in the cochlea (our snail shaped hearing organ) or neural hearing loss and is usually permanent. Sensorineural hearing loss can be mild, moderate, severe or profound.
This is a combination of a sensorineural and conductive hearing loss. It results from complications in both the inner and outer or middle ear.
The least common of hearing loss types, resulting from the absence, damage or malfunction of the auditory nerve.
Child development, It is well recognised that hearing is critical to speech and language development, communication and learning. The earlier the hearing loss occurs in a child's life, the more serious the effects on the child's development. Similarly, the earlier the problem is identified and intervention begun, the less serious the overall effect. Recent research indicates that children identified with a hearing loss who begin services early may be able to develop language (spoken and/or signed) at the level of their hearing peers.
There are four major ways in which hearing loss affects children and young adults.
Hearing impairment causes delay in the development of communication skills (speech, language and vocabulary). The language deficit causes learning problems that may result in reduced academic achievement.
The most significant difficulty for people who have hearing impairment is often problems in communicating with family, co-workers and friends.
Hearing loss first causes a person to miss certain soft sounds: mostly consonants. The vowels are more distinct. The hearing loss causes letters to ‘fall out’ of the words or sentences. When a letter falls out of a word, a syllable is blurred or a word seems garbled. Consequently a person only hears part of the sentence, and may feel quite inadequate.
Hearing loss first causes a person to miss certain soft sounds: mostly consonants. The vowels are more distinct. The hearing loss causes letters to ‘fall out’ of the words or sentences. When a letter falls out of a word, a syllable is blurred or a word seems garbled. Consequently a person only hears part of the sentence, and may feel quite inadequate.
Communication difficulty has a flow-on effect, and influences other parts of their lives, such as work, recreation, socialising and participating in community events, health and wellbeing and safety.
Hearing loss is often described as an invisible disability. It can lower a person’s quality of life, and can have far-reaching psychological, physical and social consequences, especially if it is left untreated for any length of time.
Hearing loss may mean that the person cannot participate in activities in which hearing plays a critical part, for example some sports, music, choir, drama. The presence of related conditions, for example tinnitus and balance problems, can limit the ability to participate in sport.
Untreated hearing loss can cause people to experience a range of emotions.