The Sunday Telegraph

Beethoven lost his hearing due to a virus, not ravages of syphilis

- By Craig Simpson

A VIRAL infection and not syphilis or lead poisoning rendered Ludwig van Beethoven deaf, according to new research in a BBC documentar­y.

The German composer was forced to use an ear trumpet and bite a metal rod on his piano in order to experience music, and contemplat­ed suicide when he began to lose his hearing.

Various theories have suggested his deafness stemmed from a congenital condition, or the ravages of syphilis.

But working on the BBC season marking 250 years since his death, audiologis­t Sonja Jones has offered a new diagnosis based on the Bonn-born genius’ autopsy and private letters.

She believes he suddenly developed hearing loss through a viral or bacterial infection in his late-twenties, and treatments probably made it worse.

Ms Jones has suggested the rare Sudden Sensorineu­ral Hearing Loss, which can be felt “within seconds”, was the cause of Beethoven’s disability which developed into total deafness before his death in 1827, aged 56.

While his alcoholism produced other ailments which obscure a perfect diagnosis, Ms Jones’s research presented in Being Beethoven suggests he was the victim of a tragic infection.

“All of a sudden you can sense it,” she said. “There might be a pop in your ears, or a sudden drop in your hearing, usually in one ear rather than in both.

“There’s a very real feeling of numbness and something in your ear.”

Now, the composer would have been rushed to A&E and treated with steroids, but he was given oil to pour in his ear which likely made ear wax “like a sponge”, according to Ms Jones, and made his hearing even worse.

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