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Booze May Cause Short-Term Hearing Loss ... What?
For me, this phenomenon is remarkably selective.
If you have a hard time hearing conversation at a bar, it may not be because of the noise, a study suggests.Alcohol, United Kingdom researchers found, seems to temporarily drain a person's hearing -- particularly when it comes to discerning the sounds of conversation.
In a study of 30 healthy volunteers, they found that as participants drank, their hearing became less acute. Lower-frequency hearing, which is necessary for discerning speech, suffered the most, the researchers report in the online journal BMC Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders.
It's a "well observed phenomenon" that alcohol seems to build people's tolerance to loud noise, according to the study authors, led by Tahwinder Upile of the University College London Hospitals.
But bouts of so-called "cocktail party deafness" may not result from the noisy drinking environment alone, the researchers note.
[...]
To study the short-term effects of alcohol on hearing, Upile's team recruited healthy adults between the ages of 20 and 40 who had no history of hearing problems. The volunteers had their hearing tested before and after having a predetermined number of drinks in the research lab.
In general, the researchers found, the higher a volunteer's alcohol level -- as measured by breath test -- the greater the deterioration in hearing. The hearing loss tended to be more significant in relatively older volunteers, as well as those who said they had a history of heavy drinking.





Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (3)
at 09:01 on September 29th, 2007
jordan,in the bars I use not hearing the conversation might not be such a bad thing as it is all football (soccer) and local gossip . Good stuff.
at 12:02 on September 29th, 2007
What? ... did you say something?
at 10:10 on September 29th, 2007
Well, Jordan, that seems to explain why the inebriated tend to holler when they speak. They can't hear so they think no one else can!