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#1 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
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Hearing Loss and Dementia Linked in Study
Hearing Loss and Dementia Linked in Study - 02/14/2011
Quote:
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“The problem is not that the (deaf) students do not hear. The problem is that the hearing world does not listen. “- Rev Jesse L. Jackson ( American Civil Rights Activist, Minister) |
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#3 (permalink) |
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New SDIT Deacon
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Location: Land of the backstroke
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Not sure if I am taking this right.
I used to work in 2 different nursing homes in the Alzheimer's & dementia ward. While it seemed that they might have had a hearing loss, it was more due to them just not understanding you because of confusion. These would be the same people that is a person in room 1 dropped a spoon on the floor, they would be able to hear it clear down the hall in room 35. They would also be the people that if you thought had a hearing loss and you spoke up just a little, they would berate you for "yelling" at them. My mother has dementia, and does not show any signs of hearing loss, just a confusion. You literally have to make sure you have her attention first, then she can hear anything. She seems to be more sensitive to sound and complains that the kids in the backseat of the car are yelling, when in fact they are whispering. Somehow, I don't see a correlation with dementia and hearing loss, but then again, I could be wrong and have never seen it.
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Taking life one day at a time. |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Potterhead and Janeite
![]() Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: My own private Idaho
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Lots of things that cause hearing loss can affect the brain, like demyelination of nerves, vascular damage, mutated genes that produce enzymes or proteins, etc. In a hearing loss syndrome, all of the body's systems can be affected. No surprise here.
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#7 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Jacksonville, Florida
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I do believe that I suffered some brain damage due to the "blotched" surgery on both ears, resulting in my deafness (at age 14)....I do read a hell of a lot and try to keep abreast of all the news as much as possible. And yes, I am "forgetful" at times, but don't think I have Demenita just yet....
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#8 (permalink) |
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Potterhead and Janeite
![]() Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: My own private Idaho
Posts: 6,653
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Hearing loss from aging is very different from hearing loss for some other reason. The range of loss is different.
Whether or not a person will get dementia depends on genetics, environment, and mental health status. Dementia is not a part of normal aging.
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#9 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: northern Virginia in winter; NC in summer
Posts: 3,760
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I think the social isolation that leads to feelings of paranoia (not mentioned in this study, but I've seen that elsewhere) could potentially lead to or exacerbate dementia, so I can see how if hearing loss leads to social isolation, you might have an increased risk factor.
I agree with Botts too, that this study is more likely to apply to people who lost their hearing later in life, vs. people born deaf. It would be interesting to know for a fact if that's the case. I haven't had much experience with dementia in my family, thankfully. Although the women in my family have lived to a ripe old age, and so have my uncles (still have one uncle living, age 92), none of them experienced either dementia or hearing loss. |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Manitoulin Island on Lake Huron in Canada
Posts: 7,009
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Well, my mother had Alzheimer's Disease and also had hearing loss, but refused to try out wearing hearing aid(s). My sister took care of her for over 7 years. Then my sister had to put her in a nursing home as she was getting worse. It could be that my mother had suffered the both of them as she could felt alone by herself. I don't know what was happening with her in New Mexico while I was and still up here in Canada. She had passed away back in 2006. My sister and I do not want her to lose her memory because this was her whole life. Also we worried that that we might get this from her if we ever become dementia. I just hope we don't.
By the way, my father had a little bit of dementia too but not worse off like my mother. My father was from Minnesota. He also passed away in 2003. I am not sure if he had lose his hearing while having this dementia.
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#11 (permalink) |
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Dream Weaver
![]() Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Everywhere
Posts: 17,653
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It would be interesting to read more about this.....certainly possible I would think.
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Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good. - Romans 12:21 Sometimes at night, I see their faces. I feel the traces they've left on my soul |
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