Years of Loud Noise May Cause Tumor
Editor: We all know that exposure to loud noise can cause
sensorineural hearing loss. Now there's evidence that it can cause
acoustic neuromas, as well! Here's the story!
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Newswise - New research suggests that years of repeated exposure to
loud noise increases the risk of developing a non-cancerous tumor that
could cause hearing loss.
"It doesn't matter if the noise comes from years of on-the-job
exposure or from a source that isn't job-related," said Colin
Edwards, a doctoral student in the School of Public Health at Ohio State
University.
In the current study, people who were repeatedly exposed to loud
noise over the span of several years were on average one-and-a-half
times as likely to develop this type of tumor compared to people who
weren't exposed to such noise on a regular basis.
The tumor, called acoustic neuroma, grows slowly and symptoms
typically become noticeable around age 50 or older. Of the 146 people
with acoustic neuroma in this study, nearly two out of three were 50 or
older.
An acoustic neuroma tumor slowly presses the cranial nerve that is
responsible for sensing sound and helping with balance. Symptoms include
hearing loss and a constant ringing in the ears, or tinnitus.
The study is currently in the online advance access edition of the
American Journal of Epidemiology. The study will also appear in the
February 15 printed edition of the same journal.
Edwards and his colleagues gathered four years of data from the
Swedish portion of the INTERPHONE Study, an international study of cell
phone use and tumors that affect the brain and head.
The researchers used the Swedish portion of the study because health
officials there keep meticulous data on rates of acoustic neuroma
development in the country's population, said Judith Schwartzbaum, a
study co-author and an associate professor of epidemiology in the School
of Public Health at Ohio State.
In addition to the 146 study participants with acoustic neuroma,
another 564 people without the tumor who served as controls were also
interviewed by a nurse. The participants in this group were randomly
selected from the continuously updated Swedish population registry.
Study participants ranged in age from 20 to 69.
All participants were asked if they were regularly exposed to
occupational and non-occupational loud noise and, if so, for how many
years. "Loud noise" was defined as at least 80 decibels - the
sound of city traffic.
If the subjects said that they had been regularly exposed to loud
noise, they were then asked to describe the activities during which they
were exposed to that noise.
Categories for loud noise exposure included: exposure to machines,
power tools and/or construction noise; exposure to motors, including
airplanes; exposure to loud music, including employment in the music
industry; and exposure to screaming children, sports events and/or
restaurants or bars.
The researchers also collected data on the use of hearing protection.
The two types of loud noise posing the highest risk of acoustic
neuroma development were exposure to machines, power tools and/or
construction (1.8 times more likely to develop the tumor) and exposure
to music, including employment in the music industry (2.25 times more
likely to develop the tumor.)
Exposure to motors, including airplanes increased acoustic neuroma
risk by 1.3 times, while regular exposure to screaming children, sports
events and/or bars and restaurants increased the risk by 1.4 times.
The number of years that a person was exposed to any category of loud
noise also contributed to the development of acoustic neuroma. Just five
years of regular exposure to loud noise increased the chance that a
person would develop acoustic neuroma by one-and-a-half times.
"It's not surprising that the longer that people are exposed to
loud noise, the greater their chances become for developing the
tumor," Edwards said.
The study results also suggest the importance of wearing ear
protection when exposed to loud noises. People who reported that they
protected their ears from loud noise had about the same risk of
developing acoustic neuroma as people who were not exposed to loud
noise. People who protected their hearing were also half as likely to
develop acoustic neuroma as people who didn't wear ear protection.
The tumor is fairly rare, accounting for only about 6 to 10 percent
of tumors that develop inside the skull. Depending on the population,
anywhere from one to 20 people per 100,000 develop acoustic neuroma each
year. The people with the tumor in this study had the most common type -
unilateral acoustic neuroma. About 95 percent of all cases of acoustic
neuroma affect only one ear. The other kind, bilateral acoustic neuroma,
is inherited and affects both ears.
If the tumor is caught early enough through a thorough examination
and hearing tests, a physician may be able to surgically remove it. But
as the tumor grows larger, it may become attached to the nerves that
control facial movement, balance and hearing, making it far more
difficult to remove the entire tumor.
Edwards and Schwartzbaum conducted the study with researchers from
the Institute of Environmental Medicine of the Karolinska Institutet in
Stockholm, Sweden.
Funding for this work was provided by the European Union Fifth
Framework Program; the Swedish Research Council; and the International
Union against Cancer.
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