Gehoorproblemen bij ouderen zijn vaak hersenproblemen.*
Uit studies is gebleken dat gehoorproblemen die ontstaan bij
mensen vanaf 50 jaar vaak te wijten zijn aan het ouder worden van de hersenen en
niet zo zeer het gehoororgaan omdat dat doorgaans (nog) prima is. Het blijkt dat
“feedback” problemen in de hersenen de oorzaak zijn. Bij gezonde hersenen
worden de geluiden die het oor opvangt gefilterd zodat onnodige en ongewenste
geluiden weg gelaten worden. Door het ouder worden van de hersenen wordt
langzaam al vanaf de leeftijd van 40-50 jaar dit filteren minder. Door deze
slechtere filtering gaat men minder horen wat men wil horen en begint ook
slijtage te ontstaan aan het gehoororgaan, dat nu met meer geluiden te maken
krijgt. Medisch gezien lijkt nog weinig te doen te zijn aan dit probleem. Voor
de omgeving is een tip wel belangrijk praat tegen iemand met deze problemen niet
harder doch langzamer en duidelijk. Niet harder omdat daardoor bijna zeker de
persoon nog minder juiste geluiden hoort en bij langzamer heeft de persoon meer
tijd om het juiste wel te horen.
When
The Brain, Not The Ears, Goes Hard Of Hearing
Problems
with the brain – not just the ears – cause a great deal of the age-related
hearing loss in older people. Researchers are finding more and more subtle
problems in the way our brain processes information as we age, so much so that
an older person whose ears are in fine shape may have trouble hearing because of
an aging brain.
In
addition to earlier findings of a specific type of “timing” problem that
limits our hearing as we age, the group is now finding increasing evidence of a
“feedback” problem in the brain that diminishes our ability to hear. This
week at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology in
New Orleans, researchers are discussing the results so far of the hunt for genes
that play a role in the aging brain’s plummeting ability to organize the
information our ears record.
“Traditionally,
scientists studying hearing problems started looking at the ear,” says Robert
D. Frisina, Ph.D., professor of Otolaryngology at the University of Rochester
Medical Center and an adjunct professor at Rochester Institute of Technology.
“But we are finding patients with normal ears who still have trouble
understanding a conversation. There are many people who have good inner ears who
just don’t hear well. That’s because their brains are aging.”
The
findings come from researchers at the International Center for Hearing and
Speech Research (ICHSR), an NIH-funded group of scientists in Rochester, N.Y.,
that is recognized as a leader in research in age-related hearing loss. The
center includes scientists from the National Technical Institute for the Deaf at
Rochester Institute of Technology and neuroscientists from the University of
Rochester.
Sophisticated
tests that measure how well the brain processes information that the ear detects
are helping scientists sort out the findings. Normally the brain does a
masterful job of filtering, sorting, and making sense of the information that
flows through our senses every day – the colors and shapes we see, the
textures of the objects we feel, the sounds ranging from the cooing of children
to the screech of tires on pavement that we hear morning to night. Our brain
stem sorts the bluster of information in ways that make it easy for us to carry
on our lives.
Oftentimes
it’s this ability of the brain, not hearing itself, that is diminished in
older people who say they don’t “hear” well. The loss is detected most
markedly in tests that measure a person’s ability to hear a sentence amid a
background of babble, much as one might hear at a party while trying to speak to
an individual nearby. The recently discovered feedback problem is central to
this problem, says Frisina. His team has found that in mice, the brain problems
usually precede actual hearing difficulties, and that early problems with the
brain’s feedback system make the ears more vulnerable to damage – without
the brain’s filtering capacity, the ears are more likely to be exposed to
damaging noise.
The
brain’s ability to provide proper feedback to the ear, by filtering out
unwanted and unnecessary information, declines beginning in our 40s and 50s,
Frisina says. Without that filter, a person is quickly overcome by a barrage of
information that is difficult to sort. It’s a little bit like a computer user
who would be overwhelmed by input if the spam filter suddenly failed and all
sorts of bogus messages started streaming into the “important documents”
folder. When it comes to hearing, the increase in sensory information making its
way to the brain actually hurts the person’s ability to hear well.
“The
number-one hearing complaint among the elderly is that they have trouble hearing
speech because of background noise. Someone might hear fine in a quiet
environment like their home, but when they go to a restaurant or a meeting or a
party, it sounds like chaos to them,” Frisina says. “That’s partly because
the feedback system is failing.”
To
get to the root of the feedback problem, Frisina’s neuroscience team is
investigating the possible role of a breakdown in calcium regulation in the
brain stem, throwing askew the way nerve cells talk to each other and possibly
resulting in a toxic buildup of calcium in some brain cells.
Recently
the team used gene-chip activity to chart the activity of more than 22,000 genes
in mice, comparing activity levels of genes in young mice and their older
counterparts. While dozens of genes in humans and mice are known to contribute
to congenital deafness, none has been linked to age-related hearing loss in
humans. The latest studies offer several promising leads in genes that affect
the functioning of brain chemicals like glutamate and GABA, important
neurotransmitters that allow nerve cells in the ear and brain to talk to each
other.
The
difficulties can isolate people from friends and family, beginning when people
first have difficulty with age-related hearing loss in their 50s and 60s.
“This problem is especially tragic because just when people have time to spend
with their children and grandchildren, they can’t understand what is going
on,” says Frisina. “They’re losing something they had. People respond to
this isolation by either clamming up or aggressively dominating conversation.”
The estrangement can be severe and can even result in depression.
While
there is no cure for age-related hearing loss, or presbycusis, some simple steps
can lessen its effects. Speaking loudly is an instinctual reaction when talking
to a hearing-impaired person, but that won’t help when talking to someone with
age-related hearing loss. “Speaking slightly slower than usual will help,”
says Frisina, “as if you were talking to someone who speaks a foreign
language.
“Many
older people are actually especially sensitive to loud sounds, so the worst
thing you can do is raise your voice. What you need to do is look at the person
and speak slowly and clearly. Speaking loudly is like turning up the volume on a
cheap stereo – it’s only going to distort your speech and add to the
confusion.”
Six
years ago the same team of researchers reported finding a closely related brain
“timing” problem where people are not as adept as they once were at
detecting slight gaps in speech. While the average person can hear sound gaps of
about 2 milliseconds apart, someone with a timing problem may be anywhere from 2
to 50 times worse detecting such gaps, which are crucial – though unconscious
– for properly hearing consonants and vowels.
“To
a person with a timing problem, conversation sounds like everything is spoken
through a drainpipe,” says James Ison, professor of brain and cognitive
science. “One sound leads into the next, smearing words together.” For
instance, most people know that in the English alphabet, the letter that follows
“K” is “L,” not “Elamenopee.” To a person with a timing problem,
short pauses are imperceptible, blurring words together. The problem has the
most effect on a listener’s ability to hear the first consonant of a word –
cat, hat, bat, fat, and rat may sound remarkably similar, for instance.
While
most people gradually lose the ability to hear high frequencies as they age, the
feedback and timing problems account for many of their complaints about hearing,
Frisina says.
“These
problems with the aging brain, which nearly everyone experiences, are on top of
problems with our ears, which you may or may not have as you get older. For many
people, even if they can still hear sounds as they get older, they still lose
the ability to hear and understand speech, because of these brain problems,”
Frisina says.
Frisina
and Ison are part of a center that brings together applied research on hearing
at RIT with basic neuroscience and aging research from the University of
Rochester. Frisina is the associate director of the center; the director is his
father, D. Robert Frisina, founding director of NTID and an adjunct professor at
the University. Other faculty members at the center include William O’Neill,
associate professor of neurobiology and anatomy, and Joseph Walton, associate
professor of otolaryngology, both at the University. The center is currently
funded by a five-year, $6.3 million grant from the National Institutes of
Health. (Maart
2005) (Opm. Gezonde voeding en ook gezonde
voeding voor de hersenen door lachen, denken, positief zijn zal de hersenen
zolang mogelijk in goede staat houden waardoor glutathion waarden in de
hersenen ook goed zullen zijn en veroudering afgeremd wordt. )