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hearing loss
Sensorineural hearing loss results from damage to the tiny hair cells in the inner
ear. Causes of sensorineural hearing loss can be age, noise and diseases.
Everybody loses these tiny hair cells in the cochlea throughout life, while the hearing gradually
becomes less acute.
However, the hair cells can also be damaged by excessive noise. As a result of prolonged exposure to
high intensity noise either from the work environment or from listening to loud music, sensorineural
hearing impairment is becoming more common.
You can also suffer from sensorineural hearing loss having been exposed to diseases such as mumps,
meningitis, multiple sclerosis, mnires disease or if you have used certain drugs, in particular aspirin,
cisplatin, quinine or the antibiotics streptomycin and gentamicin.
Sensorineural hearing impairment may also occur if your mother has had rubella (German measles)
during pregnancy, or if your birth weight was low.
Sensorineural hearing loss can be inherited and finally you may lose your hearing ability due to
head/ear injuries.
A ski slope hearing loss and a cookie bite hearing loss are two classical types of a sensorineural
hearing loss.
A certain type of sensorineural hearing loss is called sudden sensorineural hearing loss or just sudden
hearing loss. If you experience a sudden sensorineural hearing loss you should contact a doctor as
soon as possible.