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Original Article

Otoacoustic emissions in 28 young adults exposed to amplified music

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Pages 211-222 | Received 25 May 1998, Accepted 03 Mar 1999, Published online: 12 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

Popular concern about widespread damage to the hearing from exposure to amplified music continues, although there has been little firm evidence of permanent effects in casual listeners. Measurement of transient evoked otoacoustic emissions (TEOAEs) provides a sensitive technique for testing outer hair cell (OHC) function, and was used in this study of 28 young adults aged 18–25 years, whose only significant source of noise exposure was loud music, to look for evidence of poorer cochlear function in those of greater exposure; they provided 27 right ears and 27 left ears suitable for measurement of TEOAE strength. Estimates of subjects' total noise dose were obtained from self-reports of the duration and intensity of their exposure to music and other sources of noise. Ears with greater exposure to loud music showed significantly weaker TEOAEs than less exposed ears in response to a 4 kHz tone burst, or in response to a saturating (82 dBSPL) click if the response was treated with a high-frequency bandpass filter (2–4 kHz) (p < 0.05). Differences between more exposed and less exposed groups of ears were most marked in the 2 kHz half-octave band for right ears, and in the 2.8 kHz half-octave band for left ears. A hypothesis is proposed that weakness in TEOAEs as a result of exposure to loud music is seen first in the 2 kHz region of the emission spectrum, and later at higher frequencies; and that for a given amount of exposure, TEOAE weakness (or OHC damage) is more advanced in left ears than in right.

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