Definition & Epidemiology - Old Ears' Woes
- Definition: Age-related, progressive, bilateral, symmetrical sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL).
- Epidemiology:
- Commonest cause of SNHL in elderly.
- Typical onset: > 65 years.
- Risk Factors:
- Genetics (family history).
- Chronic noise exposure.
- Ototoxic drugs (e.g., aminoglycosides).
- Systemic diseases (e.g., diabetes, hypertension).
⭐ High-frequency hearing loss is the earliest manifestation, causing difficulty with speech discrimination, especially in noisy settings.
Pathophysiology & Types - Why Ears Age
- Age-related degeneration impacts:
- Cochlea (hair cells, supporting cells)
- Auditory nerve (spiral ganglion cells)
- Stria vascularis
- Central auditory pathways
Schuknecht's Classification: 📌 "Some Naughty Monkeys Cuddle" (Sensory, Neural, Metabolic, Cochlear Conductive)
| Type | Site of Lesion | Histopathology | Audiometric Pattern |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sensory | Organ of Corti (Outer hair cells primarily) | Loss of hair & supporting cells; basal turn | Abrupt high-frequency SNHL, good speech discrimination |
| Neural | Auditory nerve, spiral ganglion cells | Atrophy of spiral ganglion cells, cochlear neurons | ↓ speech discrimination disproportionate to pure tone loss |
| Metabolic (Strial) | Stria vascularis | Atrophy of stria vascularis | Flat audiogram, good speech discrimination |
| Mechanical (Cochlear Conductive) | Basilar membrane, spiral ligament | Thickening/stiffening of basilar membrane | Sloping high-frequency SNHL, variable speech discrimination |
⭐ Metabolic (Strial) presbycusis typically presents with a flat audiogram and good speech discrimination until late stages.
Clinical Features - Hearing Fades Away
- Hearing Loss: Insidious, progressive, bilateral, symmetrical SNHL (high-frequency first).
- Speech Issues:
- Difficulty understanding speech, especially in noise (cocktail party effect).
- Phonemic regression (speech discrimination worse than pure-tone loss suggests).
- Other Symptoms:
- Tinnitus.
- Recruitment (abnormal loudness perception).
- Diplacusis.
⭐ The "cocktail party effect" - difficulty hearing in noisy environments - is a classic early symptom and often the primary complaint motivating a hearing test_._
Diagnosis - Tuning In Trouble
- History: Gradual, bilateral hearing loss, difficulty understanding speech in noisy environments, possible tinnitus.
- Otoscopy: Usually normal tympanic membrane and external auditory canal.
- Tuning Fork Tests:
- Rinne: Positive bilaterally (AC > BC).
- Weber: Centralized, or may lateralize to the better ear if hearing loss is asymmetrical.
- Pure Tone Audiometry (PTA):
- Gold standard for diagnosis.
- Characteristic finding: Bilateral, symmetrical, sloping high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL).

- Speech Audiometry:
- Reduced speech discrimination score (SDS).
- Phonemic regression: SDS may be disproportionately poorer than pure tone thresholds suggest.
⭐ Exam Favourite: Phonemic regression (poor speech discrimination disproportionate to the degree of pure-tone hearing loss) is particularly characteristic of sensory presbycusis.
- Other Tests (if indicated):
- Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR): May show ↑ interpeak latencies.
- Otoacoustic Emissions (OAEs): Often absent/reduced, especially at high frequencies, indicating cochlear (outer hair cell) dysfunction.
Management & Prevention - Sounding Better Longer
- Core Goal: No cure for underlying degeneration. Aim: improve communication and quality of life.
- Counselling & Education: Essential for patients and families to understand and adapt.
- Auditory Rehabilitation:
- Hearing Aids: Mainstay for most. Various types (e.g., Behind-The-Ear (BTE), In-The-Canal (ITC)). Selection based on degree/type of loss and patient factors.
⭐ Hearing aids significantly improve speech discrimination and overall communication in presbycusis.
- Assistive Listening Devices (ALDs): Supplement hearing aids in specific environments (e.g., TV listeners, personal amplifiers, FM systems).
- Cochlear Implants: Considered for severe-profound SNHL with poor hearing aid benefit.
- Prevention Strategies:
- Noise Protection: Use earplugs/earmuffs in loud settings.
- Avoid Ototoxic Medications: Judicious use of drugs like aminoglycosides, loop diuretics.
- Manage Systemic Diseases: Control of diabetes, hypertension, vascular issues.
- Antioxidants: Evidence for benefit is limited.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Presbycusis: Age-related, progressive, bilateral symmetrical sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL).
- Primarily affects high-frequency sounds first, causing poor speech discrimination.
- Characteristic: Difficulty hearing in noisy environments ("cocktail party deafness").
- Pathophysiology: Mainly cochlear hair cell degeneration, especially outer hair cells in the basal turn.
- Key types: Sensory (hair cells), Neural (neurons), Strial (metabolic), Mechanical (cochlear mechanics).
- Management focuses on hearing aids, assistive listening devices, and auditory rehabilitation.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app