Thanks for the info Athena. I'm glad I now live in a quiet area but most of my life I was in big cities. Finding the right resources seems to be key. I think I'm just about ready to see someone. You seem like you have good doctors helping you. I hope your hearing loss remains stable.
I had an infection over eighteen months ago and it knocked out nerves in my left ear behind the eardrum. They might regenerate, probably not.I lose almost all of my hearing in loud places. Loud restaurants are very difficult to have a conversation. Riding in a car makes it hard for me to hear other people.My hearing test is okay for a small part then drops off in speech areas in the left ear.Great for when I want to sleep, but not so great when I want to enter into the conversations around me.
I never learned, yet, that kidney disease can affect hearing.I have some losses, specific tone loss in the normal human speaking range, and some high freq loss. I always thought most all of this was caused by working in and around heavy equip and motorcycles.Listening to conversation has always been tough, I pert-near have to SEE your lips move to be sure that I can understand the sounds I hear. If I am not looking, or someone faces away from me while talking, it's a garbled mess, I maybe get one out of four words. Most everyone thinks I'm an A-hole that doesn't listen to anyone.I may be that A-hole, but I was trying to understand.Most of what I have read about dietary supplement to improve hearing is a lot of snake oil. And if you do want to try some anyway, Please let your Dr AND Pharmacist know what you may be taking. Some supplement do not play well with medications. You do not need a bad reaction to a supplement/med on top of CKD.Be Careful,Charlie B
If you worked in a noisy environment or went to a lot of very noisy rock concerts (usual cause at or above 85-90 dBA for long periods) in the past, the little 'hairs' get flattened a but like grass getting flattened by high winds. They do not recover, and gradually hearing loss occurs in different frequencies than for age-related hearing loss. It is very easy to see in the early stages because there is a notched appearance on an audio gram that is very specific to noise induced hearing loss. As we age, the notch broadens, and we lose hearing from an increasing range of frequencies, outwards from the notch. Combined with this, are the normal age-related changes with hearing. On an audio gram this presents differently but the two combine so it is harder to differentiate the cause. Added to this, medications can causing hearing loss (I believe lasix is one such medication). From an anecdotal viewpoint, I had my hearing tested several years ago, and I know that my hearing loss was more pronounced do than usual for someone my age, nearly 52, and it was not caused by noise. I struggle to hear conversations in crowded environments. I should probably get it checked again. It does conversation problems and I think that I lip read to some extent because it is often harder if I cannot see someone's face and I then misunderstand what has been said.
Thanks for this follow up Athena. I now have some hope that there's something that can be done.
I don't have kidney disease but for comparison, I do have severe allergies to various pollens and when my nose is stuffed up, it affects my hearing. I also have loud ringing in my ears but figure it's either caused by allergy pills or damage, maybe both. Years ago, I use to work for an airlines and around the jet engines of large planes, often without proper ear protection. A captain once read me the riot act for that because he said certain decibels/pitch (not just loud noise) can damage your hearing. I hate having to ask people to repeat themselves, I watch their lips and it's embarrassing. I admit, sometimes I just act like I understood what they said which of course, has gotten me some strange looks. Then I silently hope I didn't offend them. Use to have an old friend. No really, he was old and he was loud. Always shouted. Then one day, he called me over to his house and when I got there, he was speaking very softly, real quiet like. We had a nice conversation and I left. Asked my mother if she knew whether or not he was ill or something. She asked why, I said because when he talked, his voice was quieter. She shook her head, explaining that no, he wasn't ill...his wife had finally talked him into getting hearing aids. Boy, what a difference in his speech! He actually had a very pleasant voice. Now I wonder if I am shouting when I talk...