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1.
Noise Health ; 2006 Apr-Jun; 8(31): 88-94
Article Dans Anglais | IMSEAR | ID: sea-121961

Résumé

A review of the literature studying possible correlations between hearing function and cardiovascular disease (CVD) reveals a complex and somewhat contradictory picture. Most studies favor the concept of an association between hearing loss and CVD. The issue of interactions between noise-induced hearing loss and CVD, as well as between age-related hearing loss and CVD, has been discussed in numerous publications. The present study utilizes information from an epidemiological study of elderly people in Gothenburg, Sweden. We found a probable correlation between high systolic blood pressure and hearing loss in the low and mid frequencies in elderly women, 79 years old. A tendency of a similar correlation was also found in a group of 85-year-old women. An association between high diastolic blood pressure and low- and mid-frequency hearing loss was also found in the group of women aged 85 years. No consistent associations between blood pressure or hypertension and auditory function were found in 70- and 75-year-old women or in men 70 to 85 years old.


Sujets)
Facteurs âges , Sujet âgé , Sujet âgé de 80 ans ou plus , Audiométrie tonale , Pression sanguine , Études de cohortes , Femelle , Perte d'audition/étiologie , Humains , Hypertension artérielle/complications , Mâle , Suède/épidémiologie
2.
Noise Health ; 2006 Jan-Mar; 8(30): 40-4
Article Dans Anglais | IMSEAR | ID: sea-122121

Résumé

In the present retrospective register study a very large data base consisting of screening audiograms obtained at military conscription of 18-year-old Swedish men was used. The study group comprised 450,175 men, aged 18 years, tested at conscription to military service. There were nine age groups covering a 24-year period, from 1971 to 1995. This database was compared with a number of different pre- and postnatal factors with possible influence on the hearing function. This ecologic methodology gives tentative clues (but no proof) of possible ototraumatic influences. The hearing capacity was fairly similar during the entire span of the study and only small variations were observed. There was a slight tendency of better hearing capacity in the later age groups, compared with the earlier ones. The mean thresholds of the frequencies 4 and 6 kHz were slightly elevated in 1971, 1976 and, to some extent also in 1992. We tried to calculate the levels of leisure noise exposure during the study period. There was no apparent tendency of reduced noise levels, on the contrary the noise levels seemed to increase. The treatment programmes for acute otitis media (AOM) underwent considerable changes during the period from the early fifties to the early eighties, when the participants were pre-school children. One possible explanation for the slight improvement of the hearing capacity could be less ototraumatic influence of AOM. Data about the occurrence of four common epidemic diseases, covering the periods preceding and succeeding the years when the participants were born indicated that influenza and possibly pertussis (whooping cough), constitute putative prenatal risk factors for mild to moderate high frequency hearing loss.


Sujets)
Adolescent , Facteurs âges , Exposition environnementale/effets indésirables , Surdité neurosensorielle/épidémiologie , Humains , Grippe humaine/complications , Mâle , Médecine militaire , Personnel militaire , Bruit/effets indésirables , Études rétrospectives , Facteurs de risque , Suède/épidémiologie , Coqueluche/complications
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