September 29, 2008 Issue
HEARING
LOSS HELP E-zine
"The premier e-zine for people with hearing loss"
Volume 3, Number 8 September
29, 2008
Publisher: Neil Bauman
neil@hearinglosshelp.com
http://www.hearinglosshelp.com
Copyright Center for Hearing Loss Help 2008
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"Hearing loss may change your life,
but your life need not be any less
rewarding and fulfilling
because you have a hearing loss."
— Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
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================================================== In this issue ==================================================
1. News Items
2. Beware of (Ototoxic) Drugs That Can Damage Your Ears
3. Tinnitus
4. Answers to Your Questions
5. Effective Coping Strategies
6. Information on Hearing Aids, Cochlear Implants and/or Assistive Devices
===============================================
1. News Items
===============================================
"Kiss of Deaf" or "Reiter's Ear Kiss Syndrome" (REKS)
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
Kissing causes hearing loss? You've got to be kidding!
Actually, it's true. Not all kissing, mind you, but kissing someone on their ear
can be dangerous to their hearing health. Here's the incident that brought this
fact to light.
A mother and her 4-year-old daughter were sitting on the floor watching TV.
Impulsively the child hugged her mom and vigorously kissed her. Unfortunately,
the kiss landed directly on the opening to the mother's left ear canal.
This sudden (and considerable) suction applied negative pressure to the ear
drum. (1) As the mother related, "While she was doing it, it felt like she was
sucking the air out of my head." (3) "When she finished, I had no hearing in
that ear." In addition to the total hearing loss, "she had a very intense
screeching tinnitus. She had a lot of facial twitching, muscular twitching and
pain." (2)
Fortunately, most of her hearing returned a few hours later, but she was left
with a permanent 35 dB hearing loss in the lower frequencies, "screeching
tinnitus" that later subsided to a permanent soft rushing sound, hyperacusis
(normal sounds are now too loud—"any loud sound would jostle her and send her through the roof") (2), dysacusis (distorted hearing) and facial twitching.
(3)
About a year later, she contacted Dr. Levi Reiter, professor and head of the
Audiology program, at Hofstra University in New York. Dr. Reiter's testing
revealed that she had no auditory reflex in that ear any more. The auditory
reflex is where the tiny stapedius muscle (actually the smallest muscle in the
human body) contracts and pulls the tiny stapes (or stirrup) (the smallest bone
in the human body) away from the oval window to reduce the volume of sudden loud
sounds. (2)
In addition, "she had another interesting symptom, whenever she would turn her
head from side to side, it felt like something was loose in her middle ear." (2)
Further investigation by Dr. Reiter indicated that what likely had happened was
that the ligament that fastened the stapedius muscle to the stapes had ripped
apart, leaving her with a non-functioning auditory reflex in that ear. Since the
auditory reflex could no longer dampen louder sounds, she was left with
permanent hyperacusis.
Interestingly enough, this mother only experienced sensorineural hearing loss.
There was no conductive loss whatsoever. You would have thought the middle ear
bones would have been dislocated causing a conductive loss, but nothing of the
sort happened (apart from the ligament on the stapedius muscle being ripped
apart—which doesn't cause hearing loss).
Initially the press reported this event as the "Kiss of Deaf", but due to Dr.
Reiter's ongoing research in this area, this phenomenon is now going by the
moniker of "Reiter's Ear-Kiss Syndrome" (REKS).
Ever since the first reports came out in the media, Dr. Reiter has been
receiving calls and emails from people all over the country who also have
experienced hearing loss from a kiss on the ear. (4) Rather than it being a
strange and unique occurrence, Dr. Reiter told me that REKS is much more common
than it first appeared to be.
He emphasizes that you must never kiss anyone on their ears, or let them kiss
you there. (Nibbling on someone's ears is an entirely different matter!) He
writes: "My biggest concern as far as warning the public and getting this out is
regarding newborns and infants. Mothers and fathers, and even sisters and
brothers and grandparents love to smooch up that little baby—give him a whole
kissing frenzy." (2)
Note that this may be especially true when little children try to kiss a baby
sibling. They aren't discerning where they kiss, and may forcefully kiss them on
their ear. (Adults may inadvertently do this too.)
Dr. Reiter continues, "The ear canal of an infant is very small, so that
negative pressure you're applying to the ear canal is going to have a much
greater impact than on an adult. I'm afraid there are infants out there who are
experiencing this, but they can't say 'Mommy, I can't hear in one ear,' and the
net result is that five years later, when they have a hearing test, no one will
know to relate it to this." (2) Therefore, for the sake of everyone's ears,
confine smooching to other parts of the body.
If you have had any hearing loss or other ear problems resulting from a kiss on
your ear, Dr. Reiter would love to hear from you for his ongoing research into
this phenomenon. His email address is
ears@drreiter.net.
_________
(1)
"The Kiss of Deaf": A Case Study by Levi A. Reiter. The Hearing Journal.
August 2008. Vol. 61, No. 8. pp. 32-37.
(2)
Interview with Levi Reiter, Ph.D., CCC-A, Professor of Audiology, Hofstra
University. Topic: The Kiss That Caused Hearing Loss, or Reiter’s Ear Kiss
Syndrome (REKS). 7/28/2008.
(3)
Little Girl Gives Mom Kiss Of Deaf. Hearing Review, The Insider. July 31,
2008.
(4)
Ear Kiss Causes Rare Syndrome by Dee Naquin Shafer, the ASHA Leader. August
12, 2008.
—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—
Noisy Kindergartens Are Damaging Hearing
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A recent report out of Norway (September 11, 2008) revealed
a shocking statistic. "One in six children are affected by
kindergarten noise." One in four employees suffer permanent
hearing loss for the same reason.
Figures published by the pre-school teacher’s union and work
safety authorities indicate that stress, headaches, tinnitus,
learning difficulties and at worst, impaired hearing can affect
children in noisy kindergartens, according to daily newspaper
Dagbladet.
According to a Labor Inspection Authority report from 2005,
75 percent of kindergarten employees are exposed to harmful
levels of noise at work. This means that the kids are also
exposed to these same harmful sound levels.
Things are no better over here. Many kindergartens are noisy
places. I know. My younger daughter works in one. But this
does not have to be. She told me the remarkable difference in
noise levels in Montessori schools she has also taught in.
Maybe the kindergartens should learn how the Montessori
schools control excessive racket and do the same. Reducing
this harmful racket will benefit both the kids and the staff.
Aftenposten English Web Desk / NTB
**************************************************
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**************************************************
E-zine Changes?—What are Your Thoughts?
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
Hearing Loss Help e-zine is now two and a half years old. In that
time a diverse group of thousands of people from all over the
world have subscribed. Subscribers range from highly
educated hearing professionals to hard of hearing people with
little education in third world countries.
In each issue, I have tried to have something that is useful to
everyone. In addition, I deliberately write in a simple style so
those with less education and/or a poorer grasp of English
can still understand. (And when I write things simply, there's a
good chance I'll understand it too!) This will not change.
However, its time to evaluate the e-zine and see how to make
it even better for you, our faithful readers.
Here's your chance to voice your views. If you were doing a
make-over to make this e-zine more useful for your needs,
what would you change? Share with me your thoughts and
ideas. Here are some questions to "prime the pump".
Think in two basic areas—the format/layout of the e-zine, and
the content of the e-zine.
1. Is each issue too long? Too short? About right?
2. Does it come out too often? Not often enough? About
right (typically once a month)?
3. Would you like it all fancy formatted in HTML? Or do you
want it in plain text as it is now? (If it is fancy formatted, you'd
need to be on-line to read it. With the plain text as it is now,
you can download it and read it off-line at your leisure. People
without high-speed access, or who live in some third-world
countries probably need the plain-text version.)
4. What do you like about this e-zine? What is your favorite
section (if any)?
5. What don't you like about this eZine? What is your least
favorite section (if any)?
6. What would you change? And how would you change it?
From time to time I get suggestions on items to include in the
next issue of this eZine. I welcome all suggestions and in the
past have used most of them.
If you have a suggestion for a topic you want covered, please
send it to me. Or if you see a news item you think would be
useful to hard of hearing people, again, send me the
information or URL.
I look forward to your suggestions.
Email them to me (Dr. Neil) and put "e-zine
suggestions" as the subject.
Thanks for your feedback!
===============================================
2. Beware of (Ototoxic) Drugs That Can Damage Your Ears
===============================================
Are TB Drugs Ototoxic?
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A lady wrote: "I am writing to you as I am trying to find out the
reason for my hearing loss. I am 28 (female) with a mild—moderate—severe hearing loss (at low—middle—high
frequencies). My hearing loss was first noticeable at age
20. I had my first audiogram at age 26, so do not have any
records of the loss before that.
My parents have perfect hearing and we have no record of
hearing loss in their generation of the family. We do not have
much information about previous generations.
I was infected with Tuberculosis at age 10 and was treated
with an 8 months daily course of Isoniazid/Rifampin. The
treatment started at age 11. By the time I was 12, I had
stopped taking the medications. I can say for sure that I had
perfect hearing at least till age 16-17. But sometime after that
my hearing started to degrade (was noticeable only at age
19-20).
My question is, 'Could the drugs taken at that point of time
(age 11-12) trigger an onset of progressive hearing loss
which became obvious after 6 to 7 years? Or, does hearing
loss due to ototoxicity show up immediately or within a couple
of years? Will the loss caused due to ototoxic drugs be
progressive?'"
I'm sure anything is possible, but I would have expected your
hearing loss to show up in the weeks and months after you
took these drugs—not years later—
if these drugs were
responsible for your hearing loss.
Both Isoniazid and Rifampin are ototoxic and have caused
hearing loss and tinnitus in some people. They can also cause
ataxia (staggering gait), dizziness and vertigo (spinning
sensation). However, I don't know what percentage of the
people taking either of these drugs have a resulting hearing
loss. Nor am I aware of these drugs being implicated in
progressive hearing loss.
If indeed these drugs did cause your hearing loss, my
question to you is, "How do you know you had 'perfect'
hearing until 16?" Is it possible that the drugs had already
killed the very high frequencies by that time? Typically,
ototoxic drugs begin their damage at the highest frequency
you can hear and work their way down the frequency
spectrum. I doubt many people would even notice if they had
lost hearing above 16,000 Hz for example.
Another factor to consider is whether you had balance
problems associated with taking these drugs. If you had ataxia
or dizziness or vertigo and now have hearing loss, then I
could see that there might be a connection. This is because
often drugs that affect hearing also affect balance—so if the
drug damages one, often you will also see some damage in
the other.
Also, there may have been other medications you have taken
over the years, particularly antibiotics, that could have caused
your hearing loss. Therefore, from the limited information you
have given, there is not enough evidence that the above drugs
were responsible for your hearing loss.
You can learn more about such drugs by reading my book
"Ototoxic Drugs Exposed". This book contains information on
the ototoxicity of 763 drugs known to damage ears (and information on 148
ototoxic chemicals too).
**************************************************
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interference?
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hear beautiful, clear, interference-free sounds in both ears!
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**************************************************
===============================================
3. Answers to Your Questions
===============================================
If you have a question, or if something has been puzzling you
concerning your ears, email it to
mailto:neil@hearinglosshelp.com
and put "e-zine question" as the subject. Suitable questions will be answered here.
Hearing Loss and Ear Wax
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A lady wrote: "I read your article ["Sudden Hearing Loss Is a
Medical Emergency"] as I am suffering a single-ear hearing loss. It started two
days ago when I woke up. It felt like something was blocking
my left ear. It was not very severe though. But today when I
woke up, the hearing loss became intense. I read about how
to hum and listen to it. I hear the hum louder in the blocked
ear, so it's not a serious problem (according to your article).
But the weird thing is that I do not have cold at the moment,
so how come that I have a blocked ear? Any suggestions for
me?"
Although an ear plugged by a cold is one common cause of
hearing loss such as you describe, my first reaction is that
your sudden hearing loss was likely caused by excess wax in
your ear canals. Probably what happened is that a bunch of it
fell off the sides of the ear canal and now has blocked off the
whole ear canal causing the hearing loss. I'd suggest you
have your doctor check out your ear canals and remove any
excess wax if he finds any. Hopefully, that will solve your
problem.
A few days later this lady confirmed my suspicions. She
wrote: "I went to my doctor and he checked my left ear. He
said that it was all wax. He told me to pour some warmed olive
oil into my left ear and let it soften the wax inside my ear. I did
this three times before coming back again the next day. He
then performed a suction to my left ear and finally all the wax
came out and I can hear very clearly now. He told me to
regularly clean my ears to make sure it does not happen
again."
This incident is an example of where the "hum test" (see the
above article link) comes in very useful for separating sudden
hearing loss conditions that are true emergencies from those
that are not. Although scary, sudden hearing loss does not
always have dire consequences attached that require
immediate treatment. It can be something as simple as ear
wax blocking your ear canal. However, if in doubt, seek
professional help immediately.
—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—
Where Do the Dead Hair Cells Go?
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A man asked: "When the microscopic hair cells are damaged
and break off in the cochlea, what happens to them? Are they
harmlessly absorbed, or do they float around and impair the
action of the remaining hair cells?"
Great question. Most people have the misconception that the
tiny hairs "break off" from being exposed to loud sounds, or
other causes—much like tree branches breaking in a hurricane.
This is not the right analogy.
In actual fact, as I understand it, the tiny hairs don't "break off".
Rather the whole hair cell itself dies—taking with it the bundle
of "hairs" numbering between 30 and 300 tiny stereocilia per
bundle (what we colloquially call "hairs") that stick up from
each hair cell. These dead cells are then absorbed by the
body.
What causes these hair cells to die? One mechanism is being
"zapped" by "free radicals" released as a result of loud noise
or ototoxic drugs for example. The hair cell either dies from a
"direct hit", or if mortally wounded, programs itself to die
through a process called apoptosis.
In addition to dying hair cells, another mechanism is that as we
age, the stereocilia seem to slowly disappear—becoming
shorter and shorter and finally the whole hair cell is "overrun"
by adjacent supporting cells and "disappears".
In any case, the dead cells are not left to float around and
cause havoc with the remaining hearing mechanism.
===============================================
4. Tinnitus
===============================================
Can Lidocaine Cause Tinnitus?
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A lady wrote: "I have had tinnitus for the past 4+ yrs. It goes
up and down according to stress levels, diet, and so forth.
However, I went to the dentist three days ago and I notice that
the volume has increased more than usual. I called today
and his assistant told me he used Lidocaine as an
anesthetic. Could this be the cause of the sound level
increase? I do not see Lidocaine in the ototoxic lists I have
searched in the Internet. Perhaps this could be a temporary
condition and may level out in several more days. Do you
have any info on this subject?"
Internet lists are not very complete and typically only list the
most ototoxic drugs. However, Lidocaine is listed in both the
Physicians' Desk Reference (PDR) (used in the USA) and the
Compendium of Pharmaceuticals and Specialties (CPS)
(used in Canada) as causing tinnitus. (The CPS also lists
Lidocaine as causing hyperacusis.)
It is certainly possible that your tinnitus might have been
caused by the Lidocaine. However, Lidocaine may not have
been the culprit. Your increased tinnitus could have been
caused by the "trauma" of your dental work. For example,
dental drills are pretty loud in your ears (and via bone
conduction too). Also, your jaw could have been stretched a
certain way which could have affected your TMJ, and thus
affect your tinnitus. You need to consider these and other
possibilities besides the Lidocaine.
In any case, I would expect your tinnitus to drop back to its old
level in a few days to a couple of weeks.
—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—
Why Do Drugs for Treating Tinnitus Also Cause Tinnitus?
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A lady wrote: "Some drugs, such as Neurontin [Gabapentin] or
Xanax [Alprazolam] have been recommended as treatments
for tinnitus. Is not this contradictory since they can also cause
tinnitus? Xanax does lower it for me, temporarily; and
Neurontin does lower it while the drug is in my system."
The above drugs are ototoxic—they can damage your ears.
One of their side effects is tinnitus as you know. Although,
some doctors still prescribe these drugs for tinnitus control,
the truth is, the FDA has not approved a single drug as being
effective for tinnitus—so that should tell you something right
there—that these drugs have not been proven to reduce
tinnitus.
In my opinion, what these drugs do is not affect the tinnitus as
such, but change your response to your tinnitus. In other
words when you take such drugs, you don't worry about your
tinnitus as much, even though it is still there. Thus, it doesn't
seem so loud and intrusive.
The proof that these drugs don't really do anything to "cure" your tinnitus is that when you stop taking them, your tinnitus is
just as loud as it was before.
Thus, if you take one of these drugs for tinnitus, it may give
you a bit of apparent temporary relief—but that is it. You need
to begin practicing the various tinnitus treatments that will help
you get your tinnitus under control in the long term.
If you are interested in learning more about what you can do to
help bring your tinnitus under your control, you would do well
to read my book, "When Your Ears Ring! Cope With Your
Tinnitus—Here's How".
===============================================
5. Effective Coping Strategies
===============================================
Where's That Sound Coming From?
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
One lady asked, "Do you ever hear something and can't figure
out immediately where the sound is coming from?"
Another lady replied, "For me, that happens all the time. I have
much less hearing in my right ear than in my left. At work when
someone calls my name and I am up at the printer, I often turn
to the wrong person and say, "What?" only to be told that it
was someone else nearby.
Or I hear a repetitive noise, and have to turn my head in
different directions to figure out where it is coming from so I
can go see what it is.
Worst is when I am in a parking lot and hear a horn or the
sound of the motor and don't know if it is coming from behind
me, or beside me, or is nowhere near me.
Similarly, I do not know what direction sirens are coming from
when I am driving. It is scary, but also embarrassing at times.
Fortunately I don't have to deal with it very often, but one week
I mistook where a police siren was coming from twice.
The first time I was on a ramp getting ready to merge onto
a highway from the interstate and heard a siren. I looked
carefully at the end of the ramp as I delayed merging into
traffic and couldn't find the source of the siren, and then
realized the police car was behind me so I needed to get out
of his way!
Then several days later I was driving home and came to an
intersection with limited visibility when I heard a siren. I
assumed since I was on a side road and the crossroad was a
well traveled road, the emergency vehicle was on that road
and again looked both ways several times trying to figure out
where the siren was coming from. At which point the car
across the intersection waved me to come through even
though he had gotten there before I did, and I then discovered
(again) that the police car had been sitting right behind me."
This goes to show that we hard of hearing people need to
always be alert and use our eyes in addition to our ears (not to
mention looking in every direction—
not just the most likely
ones)!
Unfortunately, people with a slow, progressive hearing loss
often still act as hearing people, and expect their ears to work
normally. Thus, they rely on their (defective) ears instead of
using their eyes in addition to their ears.
For myself, I can't hear the sirens until they are right beside
me (much too late to get out of their way), so I always watch
for flashing lights. It is the rare emergency vehicle that ever
gets close to me without my already having seen its
emergency lights and taken appropriate action. This is
because I was born with a severe hearing loss and never have
been able to rely on my hearing.
**************************************************
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===============================================
6. Information on Hearing Aids, Cochlear Implants
and/or Assistive Devices
===============================================
Trouble Hearing on the Telephone
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A man wrote: "During the past few years I've found that
understanding speech on the telephone has become
increasingly difficult. I wonder if this issue has been
addressed.
1) Are there certain types of phones that make this more of a
problem (i.e. portable phones)?
2) Are people generally speaking much more rapidly,
contributing to increased difficulty?
3) I've found that people with unfamiliar accents are a
particular problem.
I'd appreciate your thoughts on this subject."
The most likely reason for having trouble understanding
speech—on the phone, or in person—is that you have a high-frequency hearing loss. Since most of the "intelligence" of
speech is in the higher frequencies, if you have a high-frequency loss, you hear people talking just fine, but you can't
always understand what they are saying.
What can make a difference between phones is that some
phones have better high-frequency sound than others so you
would hear better on them. There are special amplified
phones that emphasize the higher frequencies to help people
like you hear (and understand) on the phone better. A good
example of such a phone is the
TeleTalker.
However, you need to be aware that phones all cut off
somewhere around 3,000 to 3,500 Hz., so you'll never be
able to hear frequencies higher than that no matter which
phone you try.
In addition, some people mumble or don't talk directly into the
receiver, which sure doesn't help. When you have any hearing
loss, it takes your brain longer to decode speech, so when
people talk fast, or mumble, or have accents, you miss more
as your brain vainly struggles with all this extra processing and
just can't keep up.
Finally, you should be aware that high-frequency hearing loss
sneaks up on you so you are often not even aware of how
much you are really missing. You should go to an audiologist
and have your hearing evaluated. You might be surprised how
much hearing loss you actually have.
—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—
Neckloop Microphones and Hearing Clearly
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A lady wrote: "I read with interest about the lady who had
trouble hearing her own voice when using the neckloop with
her cell phone. I, too, had that problem and had 3 of my
programs on my Freedom CI switched to M/T mode.
I don't use the neckloop often but recently went to a
convention and used the neckloop with my cell phone to
contact my friends inside the convention center. I could hear
them well. However, they had difficulty hearing me when I
spoke into the neckloop mike. They said my voice sounded
'tinny' and 'far away'.
My hearing friends got frustrated and just wanted me to hear
and speak directly into the cell phone. Is this a normal
occurrence when using the neckloop, or does this mean there
is something wrong with my neckloop? Other friends have
expressed the same difficulty of hearing my voice via the
neckloop on other occasions. Please let me know what I can
do this solve this problem."
The problem is when you plug a neckloop into the headset
jack, then the cell phone's mic is cut off—so you can't
accommodate your friends by talking into the phone's
microphone even if you wanted to. (That is why the neckloop
has the microphone built in.)
I think most of what you are experiencing is an inherent
problem with the basic design because the microphone is
hanging down on your chest instead of up by your mouth.
Obviously, the closer the microphone is to your mouth, the
better (and louder) your voice will sound to people listening to
you at the other end. Thus a neckloop microphone isn't the
best choice in that respect as it is always so far away from
your mouth. Furthermore, the noisier the location, the more
noise a distant microphone will pick up. Thus neckloop
microphones would sound better in quiet situations.
Now, what can you do to help things along? I can think of two
things. First, I wonder if you talk quietly in the first place. That
would make it difficult for the more distant neckloop
microphone to adequately pick up your voice. So speaking up
would almost certainly help.
Second, instead of talking "out", try talking "down" to your
microphone. Aim your voice as best you can at the
microphone. This should help too.
Doing both would be even better. Try this and see if it makes
any difference.
If all else fails, hold the microphone up closer to your mouth
when you talk. This should make a difference by greatly
reducing the distance from it to your lips. It might look funny,
but it should work.
Finally, there is always a chance that your neckloop isn't
working properly—
but I'd try the above first. If the microphone
is bad, doing the above shouldn't make much difference.
—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—
Room Loops Really Work!
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A man wrote: "Thank you for both your wonderful website
(http://www.hearinglosshelp.com ) for the Univox 2A loop
system I just installed. I found the system by "googling" for a
loop system. Your website is very user friendly and I felt that I
could trust the content.
I have a moderate to severe hearing loss. It didn't become
moderate to severe until about 5 years ago. Up until then I
was able to enjoy television much like normal hearing people,
only missing a little bit here and there. As anyone with my level
of hearing loss knows, it became a whole different story with
moderate to severe loss.
I invested in an expensive new Bose home stereo with the
hopes that the good sound quality would enable me to hear
my television. I can tell the sound quality is good, but I still
cannot make out speech because the speaker is about 12
feet away.
I think I am like a lot of hearing impaired individuals in that I
have begun to feel hopeless, like there is simply no way I will
hear things like TV "normally" ever again.
I read the reviews of other users of the Univox 2A, but I was
still a little apprehensive. Well, I just hooked it up and I am
blown away!
Sound is piping through my hearing aid (with the t-coil program
on) and I can hear EVERY WORD, even the commercials,
which previously were impossible! I simply cannot believe
how good it sounds. I am already a lot less resentful of my
hearing loss.
This solution works perfectly, allows me to hear and to keep
the TV at a comfortable volume for others, it's totally hassle
free, all I do is put my aid on t-coil and it works.
Thank you so much this gift of hearing that I never thought I
would have, even in today's age of technology innovations. It
has far exceeded what I had hoped for. This is truly one
of the happiest moments I have had in many years.
Hallelujah."
It's always nice to get letters that reinforce just how
wonderfully clear the sound is when using the t-coils on your
hearing aids coupled with loop systems. I have enjoyed this
beautiful, clear sound for some time, as I looped my house
quite a while ago.
If you want to learn more about these wonderful loop systems,
read the article "Loop Systems—the Best-Kept Secret in
Town!".
The
Univox 2A
loop amplifier (mentioned above) is truly a great little home
loop amplifier—and it doesn't cost an arm and a leg either!
—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—
Hands-free Cell Phone Solutions for Hard of Hearing People
by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.
A man wrote: "I wear hearing aids. Are there any cell phone
attachments so that I can wear my hearing aids and use my
cell phone in hands-free mode while I am driving?"
If your hearing aids have good t-coils in them, then there are
two good possibilities for hands-free cell phone use.
One is to get a cell phone that has the standard 2.5 mm
hands-free jack and plug in the
T-Links
that couples to the t-coils in your hearing aids. If your phone
has a proprietary hands-free jack, you can likely get the
necessary adapter
here.
Second, is to get a cell phone that has bluetooth built in and
then use a bluetooth neckloop that also couples to the t-coil in
your aids. You can see such a
bluetooth neckloop
here.
My wife's cell phone has both the 2.5 mm jack and bluetooth
built in so I use either option when I use her cell phone. Both
work well for me.
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HEARING LOSS HELP E-zine
Neil Bauman, Publisher
Center for Hearing Loss Help
49 Piston Court
Stewartstown, PA 17363 USA
Phone: (717) 993-8555
Fax (717) 993-6661
http://www.hearinglosshelp.com
neil@hearinglosshelp.com
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