Researchers examined data from 36 previously published studies with
a total of 20,264 participants who underwent both cognitive
evaluations and hearing tests. People with age-related hearing loss
were up to twice as likely to have cognitive impairment and 2.4
times more apt to have dementia, the study found.
“The results provide further evidence that hearing loss may be a
risk factor for increased cognitive decline, cognitive impairment
and dementia,” said lead study author David Loughrey, a researcher
at the School of Medicine at Trinity College in Dublin.
About one in three adults from age 65 to 74 have hearing loss, and
almost half of people older than 75 have trouble hearing, according
to the National Institutes of Health.
Age-related hearing loss can lead to a wide variety of health
problems, as it touches on many aspects of daily life, making it
harder for people to keep up with conversations, maintain a normal
social life and follow a doctor’s advice about other chronic medical
problems.
While some previous studies have linked age-related hearing loss to
dementia, results have been mixed, Loughrey said by email. For the
current analysis, researchers only included studies that tested
hearing with “pure-tone audiometry,” the gold standard for assessing
structural hearing problems.
Previous studies have indicated that age-related hearing loss may be
a risk factor for dementia. However, results from individual studies
have been inconsistent, with some studies reporting a small or
non-significant association. This may have been due to differences
in methods such as the type of hearing assessment used.
It’s not clear how age-related hearing loss and cognitive decline
are related, and the study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed
to answer this question.
“A possibility is that hearing loss causes cognitive decline through
the increased mental energy required to perceive speech, leaving
fewer resources available for other cognitive processes, such as
memory,” Loughrey said. “Additionally, research suggests that
factors such as loss of mental stimulation, depression or loneliness
may be associated with a higher risk of dementia.”
The study found a small but statistically meaningful association
between hearing loss and a variety of cognitive abilities including
executive function, memory, processing speed and what’s known as
visuospatial ability, or detecting where things are in a room or on
a page.
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Hearing aids may have some protective effect, the new analysis
suggested.
So-called vascular risk factors like smoking or having high blood
pressure or diabetes might help explain declines in some cognitive
skills, but hearing loss was still associated with cognitive decline
and dementia even after accounting for vascular risk factors.
Shifts in behavior that can accompany both hearing loss and
cognitive impairment may explain the link found in the study said
Dr. Francesco Panza, author of an accompanying editorial and
neuroscience researcher at the University of Bari Aldo Moro in
Italy.
“Behavioral mechanisms may explain these associations, such as the
withdrawal of older adults from situations in which they may have
difficulty hearing and communicating, which may contribute to the
development of social isolation, loneliness, and consequent
cognitive decline,” Panza said by email.
“Furthermore, several factors and diseases associated with frailty
are also related to cognitive impairment, including nutritional
factors, metabolic disorders, inflammatory markers, hormones,
diabetes, congestive heart failure, and stroke,” Panza added.
Regardless of the reasons for this connection, the study findings
suggest that older adults should get routine hearing checks.
“If someone is experiencing hearing loss or has any concerns, it is
advised that they check with a medical professional or an
audiologist,” Loughrey said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2Avb5nP JAMA Otolaryngology Head and Neck
Surgery, online December 7, 2017.
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