iHuh?
Listen up, teenagers: New research shows that cranking up your iPod 
can cause irreparable damage to your hearing

By Patricia Wen, Globe Staff  |  May 18, 2009
The Boston Globe

CAMBRIDGE - Seventeen-year-old Nicholas Silva has one way to escape 
the tensions of teenage life: He picks up his beloved iPod. The 
Cambridge Rindge & Latin School junior places the earbuds snugly into 
his ear canals and sets the volume bar as high as possible. For him, 
there is no such thing as a mute button standing between him and the 
full-pitched vocals of his favorite rappers, Kanye West and Rick Ross.

"When it's louder, you're in the zone," he said sitting with friends 
at the food court in the CambridgeSide Galleria last weekend.

But audiologists say that teenagers such as Silva may be heading into 
a new, dreaded zone: Irreparable hearing damage.

Since iPods were launched eight years ago, some 200 million of these 
MP3 players have been sold worldwide, giving young and old the 
convenience of storing thousands of songs on a feather-weight 
portable device with enduring battery life. The advance in technology 
means extended listening time; for teens, that listening is often 
done at an especially high decibel level, research shows. And that 
poses some tangible risks.

Researchers say the sensory cells in our inner ear - which transmit 
sounds to our brains - can only take so much auditory bombardment 
before they begin to wilt, irreparably, and die.

The damage teens suffer now may not show up until they're in their 
40s and asking friends in crowded restaurants, "Could you repeat 
that?"

Or it may appear sooner. Some young adults in their 20s - who 
listened at high levels hour after hour, day after day - are being 
diagnosed with hearing at the level of a typical 50-year-old, 
according to Dr. Brian Fligor, a former amateur rock guitarist who is 
now director of diagnostic audiology at Children's Hospital Boston.

Teens often fail to realize just how much they crank up the volume to 
compensate for the clanging of the subway or the chatter in the cafe, 
research shows. Boys tend to turn up the iPod volume louder than 
girls, and peer pressure can influence volume levels, according to a 
recent study at Children's Hospital Boston.

"I tell them you can listen loud - but you have to listen smart," 
said Fligor, author of the study.

The obvious question for iPod fanatics is: How much is too much?

The science of hearing loss is murky, and like a lot of areas of 
public health, a person's vulnerability is a combination of genetic 
predisposition and hard-to-measure environmental hazards. All people 
suffer some age-related loss that shows up anywhere from their 40s to 
60s, but how much loud-noise exposure you can sustain depends on 
whether you are born with tough or tender ears. Some ears fully 
recover from an ear-ringing blaring rock concert; others are 
permanently weakened by it.

Because more men show up complaining about hearing loss, some doctors 
concluded that more men have susceptible ears; however some 
researchers believe that men's ears over the decades are just more 
exposed to aggravating sounds, such as loud machinery in factories or 
gunfire in the military.

When it comes to setting safe guidelines for iPod users, today's 
audiologists rely largely on a 1970s federal government study of more 
than 1,000 workers in various industries. They concluded that 8 
percent of workers who were exposed to 85 decibels for more than 
eight hours a day, for 40 years, suffered serious, noise-related 
hearing impairment.

It may seem arbitrary to transfer that 85-decibel level to iPod use, 
but many audiologists have found it a useful guide.

Fligor, who has authored several studies about iPod use among teens 
and young adults, has some general guidelines for the typical user: 
Based on available data, he recommends iPod users of any age listen 
to no more than 90 minutes a day if the volume is set at 80 percent 
of its capacity - roughly a 90-decibel level.

If the volume bar were set at 60 percent, which reflects about 75 
decibels, Fligor said, one could probably listen "all day" without 
risking serious damage; if it were set at 90 percent of maximum 
capacity, or nearly 100 decibels, a person could listen safely only 
for about 20 minutes a day.

Giving iPod advice is more art than science, and not all doctors are 
willing to set such specific listening guidelines. Dr. Sharon Kujawa, 
director of audiology at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary in 
Boston, said she cannot yet give specific recommendations for iPod 
users - not until more research is done. She said "people are all 
different" and it is not possible now to establish safe guidelines, 
other than "err on the side of caution."

Today's iPods can be set to automatically limit maximum volume, which 
Fligor measures as about 105 decibels.

Dr. Roland Eavey, the former director of pediatric otolaryngology at 
Mass. Eye and Ear and now chief of otolaryngology at Vanderbilt 
University Medical Center in Nashville, said today's youth are far 
too oblivious to the dangers of premature hearing loss.

He found that only 8 percent of adolescents ranked hearing loss as a 
major health problem, while more than 40 percent saw sexually 
transmitted diseases, substance abuse, depression, and smoking as 
serious issues, according to a 2005 report that examined attitudes of 
nearly 10,000 teenagers and young adults who responded to a Web-based 
survey posted on MTV.com.

That same survey found that 61 percent of them experienced ringing in 
their ears or some hearing impairment after a concert, and 43 percent 
after being at a club. Only 14 percent had used protective earplugs. 
Eavey emphasized that noise-related damage can be alleviated, in 
part, by giving one's ear a rest between exposures.

Teenagers who think their ears are immune from damage need only know 
about the hearing levels of the Who's guitarist, Peter Townshend, or 
rock guitarist Jeff Beck. These performers, now in their mid-60s, 
suffer from permanent noise-related hearing damage and they speak 
publicly about the need for more ear protections for musicians.

Fligor, who confesses that he too often loves to "listen loud," tries 
not to be a purist. He said teenagers should remember that the 
occasional shriek-filled, booming rock concert is probably fine. 
Taking in a favorite hip-hop song at the iPod's full volume also 
isn't going to ruin their ears on a given day "as long as you don't 
listen to more than one song."


Play it safe

1. Don't listen to the iPod for more than 90 minutes a day at a 
volume level higher than 80 percent of capacity. If you set the 
volume at 60 percent of capacity, you could probably listen safely 
almost all day.

2. Keep background noises, such as the subway clanging or the 
restaurant chatter, in mind in setting volume levels. Your iPod may 
not sound dangerously loud to you, even when it is.

3. Use earbuds that fit snugly into your ears, to remove as much 
background noise as possible.

4. Take time to rest your inner ear, whether it's between rock 
concerts or iPod sessions.

5. Don't think that just because that post-concert "ringing in the 
ears" has stopped, it means you've escaped damage. Hearing loss is 
gradual, and it may not show up until middle age when it's too late 
to do anything about it.

6. Consider wearing ear protection when attending loud performances, 
or when you are using noisy equipment such as snowblowers and power 
tools.

SOURCE: BRIAN FLIGOR, DIRECTOR OF DIAGNOSTIC AUDIOLOGY AT CHILDREN'S 
HOSPITAL BOSTON


Patricia Wen can be reached at w...@globe.com.
© Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

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