Hearing loss doesn't happen to everyone at the same rate or for the same reasons. Your genes, your environment, your medical history, and your lifestyle all shape your hearing health over time. Understanding the specific causes helps you know what to watch for, what you can prevent, and when to seek help.
Age-Related Hearing Loss (Presbycusis)
Most common cause of hearing loss in adults
Age-related hearing loss is a gradual, progressive decline in hearing that typically begins in the mid-50s and accelerates through the 60s and 70s. By age 75, roughly half of all adults have a clinically significant hearing loss.
It occurs because the cochlear hair cells — the sensory receptors responsible for converting sound vibrations into electrical signals — naturally degenerate over time. Unlike some cells in the body, cochlear hair cells do not regenerate. Once lost, they're gone.
Presbycusis typically affects high frequencies first — the sounds of speech most affected are consonants (s, t, sh, ch, f, h), which carry the clarity and meaning of words rather than the volume. This is why people with age-related hearing loss often say they can "hear that someone's talking" but can't make out the words.
Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
Completely preventable — and the most preventable major cause
Noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) is the second most common form of permanent hearing loss. It occurs when the ear is exposed to sounds loud enough to damage the delicate hair cells of the cochlea — either from a single extremely loud event (an explosion, a gunshot at close range) or from chronic exposure over years (construction work, live music, headphones at high volume).
How loud is too loud?
| Sound Source | Typical dB | Safe Exposure |
|---|---|---|
| Whisper | ~30 dB | No limit |
| Normal conversation | ~60 dB | No limit |
| Busy traffic | ~70–85 dB | Hours |
| Motorcycle, power tools | ~85–95 dB | ~1–8 hours |
| Live concert, club music | ~100–110 dB | ~15 mins–1 hour |
| Gunshot, jet engine | 140+ dB | Instant damage |
The 85 dB threshold is the occupational exposure limit used in workplace safety standards worldwide. For recreational noise, the rule of thumb is: if you need to raise your voice to be heard by someone an arm's length away, the noise is likely above 85 dB and hearing protection should be used.
Headphones at Full Volume
Modern headphones and earbuds can produce volumes exceeding 100–110 dB at maximum setting — the same level as a live rock concert. At that volume, permanent damage can begin within minutes. The safer limit is below 70% of maximum volume for most earbuds.
Ototoxicity (Medication-Induced Hearing Loss)
Ototoxicity refers to damage to the inner ear (cochlea or vestibular system) caused by certain medications. The effect can be temporary or permanent, dose-dependent, and sometimes irreversible.
Common ototoxic drug classes:
- Aminoglycoside antibiotics (gentamicin, streptomycin) — may cause permanent hearing loss; used for severe infections
- Certain chemotherapy agents (cisplatin, carboplatin) — particularly associated with cochlear damage
- Loop diuretics (furosemide/frusemide) — usually reversible
- High-dose aspirin and NSAIDs — usually reversible at high doses
- Certain antimalarial drugs (quinine, chloroquine)
- Some antidepressants (tricyclics in high doses)
If you're prescribed a medication with known ototoxic risk, your doctor should monitor your hearing before and during treatment. Never stop a prescribed medication without consulting your doctor.
Infections and Illnesses
Several viral and bacterial infections can cause hearing loss, either as a direct effect or as a complication of the illness:
- Sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSHL) — an unexplained, rapid loss of hearing in one or both ears, often linked to viral infection; a medical emergency requiring prompt steroid treatment
- Meningitis — can cause permanent cochlear damage
- Measles and mumps — both can cause sensorineural hearing loss
- Cytomegalovirus (CMV) — a congenital cause of hearing loss in newborns
- Chronic otitis media (recurrent middle ear infections) — can cause conductive or mixed loss through ossicle damage or cholesteatoma formation
Genetics and Hereditary Factors
Genetic factors account for roughly 50–60% of congenital (present at birth) hearing loss and play a significant role in age-related hearing loss susceptibility. Hereditary hearing loss may be:
- Syndromic — hearing loss occurs alongside other medical conditions (e.g., Usher syndrome, Pendred syndrome)
- Non-syndromic — hearing loss is the only manifestation (e.g., Connexin 26 mutations, the most common genetic cause)
If there's a family history of early-onset hearing loss, genetic counselling and early hearing testing can be valuable.
Physical Trauma and Head Injury
- Skull fractures — especially temporal bone fractures can sever the auditory nerve
- Barotrauma — rapid pressure changes (flying, scuba diving) can damage the eardrum or inner ear
- Eardrum perforation — from direct injury, explosions, or forcefully inserting objects
What You Can Prevent
Protect the Hearing You Have
- Keep headphone volume below 70% of maximum
- Use hearing protection (earplugs or earmuffs) in loud environments
- Give your ears recovery time after noise exposure
- Manage cardiovascular health — good blood flow supports cochlear health
- Avoid smoking — smoking is associated with increased risk of age-related hearing loss
- Have your hearing tested annually after age 60, or sooner if you notice changes
⚠️ Medical Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only. If you are concerned about hearing loss or ototoxic medications, consult your doctor or an audiologist. Read full disclaimer