NIHL Intro - Ears Ringing Bad
- Definition: Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) resulting from exposure to loud sound.
- Types of Noise:
- Continuous (e.g., factory machinery)
- Intermittent (e.g., power tools with breaks)
- Impulse/Impact (e.g., gunfire, explosions - most damaging)
- Pathophysiology: Primarily affects outer hair cells (OHCs) in the basal turn of the cochlea (high frequencies).
- Mechanical damage: Stereocilia disarray, detachment, or fracture.
- Metabolic damage: ↑ Oxidative stress, mitochondrial damage, glutamate excitotoxicity.
- Key Thresholds:
- OSHA: 90 dBA for 8-hour Time-Weighted Average (TWA).
- NIOSH: 85 dBA for 8-hour TWA (more protective).

⭐ The outer hair cells (OHCs) are typically the first and most severely affected structures in noise-induced hearing loss.
📌 Mnemonic: Noise Induced Hearing Loss - Nasty Irritating Humming Loudly!
NIHL Signs - Can't Hear Ya!
Symptoms:
- Progressive, bilateral, symmetrical hearing loss.
- Tinnitus: Often precedes/accompanies hearing loss.
- Difficulty understanding speech in noisy backgrounds (cocktail party deafness).
- Diplacusis (perceiving one sound as two).
- Recruitment (abnormal perception of loudness).
Threshold Shifts:
- Temporary Threshold Shift (TTS): Reversible, occurs after noise exposure, recovers over hours/days.
- Permanent Threshold Shift (PTS): Irreversible, results from long-term exposure or single intense event.
Audiometric Findings:
- Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL).
- Characteristic audiometric notch at 4 kHz - the 'acoustic dip' or 'Boomerang notch'.
- Notch may deepen and widen with continued exposure.
- Speech discrimination scores: Relatively preserved in early stages.
⭐ The hallmark audiometric finding in NIHL is a sensorineural hearing loss pattern with a characteristic notch, typically at 4000 Hz.
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NIHL Care - Sound Shield Tactics
Prevention First!
- Hierarchy of Controls for Noise:
- Engineering: Reduce source noise (e.g., quieter machinery), sound absorption, enclosures.
- Administrative: Limit exposure duration, job rotation, quiet areas for breaks.
- Personal Protective Equipment (PPE): Earplugs, earmuffs, canal caps. Check Noise Reduction Rating (NRR).

- Hearing Conservation Programs (HCPs): Essential in industries; include monitoring, audiometry, education.
Management (Established NIHL - No Cure):
- Amplification: Hearing aids to improve sound perception.
- Assistive Listening Devices (ALDs): For specific situations (TV, phone).
- Tinnitus Relief: Sound therapy (maskers), counseling, relaxation techniques.
- Experimental: Antioxidants (e.g., N-acetylcysteine, Vitamin E) - research ongoing.
⭐ Effective Hearing Conservation Programs (HCPs), including noise monitoring, audiometric testing, worker education, and use of PPE, are critical in preventing NIHL in occupational settings.
NIHL Law & Links - Sound Judgement
- Medico-legal (India):
- Workmen's Compensation Act, 1923: NIHL is a notifiable & compensable occupational disease.
- Listed under Schedule III.
- Role of audiometry: Crucial for compensation claims.
- Disability assessment: Based on pure tone audiometry (PTA) thresholds.
⭐ Under the Indian Factories Act, 1948, the permissible noise exposure limit for an 8-hour workday is 90 dBA.
- Workmen's Compensation Act, 1923: NIHL is a notifiable & compensable occupational disease.
- Differentiating NIHL from other SNHL:
- NIHL: Bilateral, symmetrical, 4kHz notch, history of noise exposure.
- Presbycusis: Age-related, sloping high-frequency loss.
- Ototoxicity: Drug-induced, often bilateral high-frequency loss.
- Meniere's Disease: Fluctuating low-frequency SNHL, vertigo, tinnitus (often unilateral).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- NIHL is a preventable sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) from excessive noise exposure.
- Hallmark: Audiometric notch (dip) at 4 kHz is characteristic.
- Primary site of damage: Outer hair cells (OHCs) in the cochlea.
- Typically bilateral, symmetrical, painless, and progressive with continued exposure.
- Tinnitus is a frequent accompanying symptom.
- Prevention is key: limit exposure and use hearing protection devices (HPDs).
- Differentiate Temporary Threshold Shift (TTS) from Permanent Threshold Shift (PTS).
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