Albuquerque Journal

Hearing aids depend on type, severity of loss

Patients can often find success trying different types

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Dear Mayo Clinic: Why do hearing aids work for some people but not others? A: The type of hearing loss you have and how severe it is can impact how well a hearing aid works for you. A variety of hearing aids are available, so if the first one you try isn’t helpful, ask your audiologis­t to recommend another. For people who have hearing loss that does not benefit from hearing aids, another device called a cochlear implant may be a useful alternativ­e.

Your ear has three areas: the outer, middle and inner ear. When you hear, sound waves pass through the outer ear and cause vibrations at the eardrum, which are transmitte­d through the three small bones of the middle ear to the fluidfille­d inner ear. The inner ear is a snailshape­d structure called the cochlea.

Within the cochlea are thousands of tiny hair cells that help translate the sound vibrations into electrical signals that are sent to your brain through your auditory nerve. The vibrations of different sounds affect these tiny hair cells in different ways, causing different signals to be sent to your brain. That’s how you distinguis­h one sound from another.

In most people who develop hearing loss, the hair cells in the cochlea are damaged or missing, usually as a result of aging or exposure to loud noise, or due to genetic reasons. That means the signals can’t be transmitte­d efficientl­y to the brain.

Hearing aids don’t replace or regenerate the hair cells that have been damaged, so they can’t completely restore normal hearing. They can improve your ability to hear by amplifying sound, helping you hear the sounds you’ve had trouble hearing. But even when the sound level increases with a hearing aid, you still may notice some hearing loss.

Most hearing aids are digital and can be programmed individual­ly to analyze and adjust sound based on your specific hearing loss, listening needs and the level of the sounds around you. Although hearing aids can be programmed to amplify certain sounds, they cannot eliminate all background noise.

Hearing aids vary significan­tly in price, size and features. Some fit completely inside your ear canal. Some are placed in the outer portion of your ear. Others hook over the top of your ear and sit behind it. Your audiologis­t can review your options and help you choose which one might be best for your needs.

 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL FILE PHOTO ?? An audiologis­t checks the hearing aid of her patient.
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL FILE PHOTO An audiologis­t checks the hearing aid of her patient.

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