Vitamin supplements may protect against noise-induced
hearing loss
Editor: There's a growing body of evidence that supplements may be
effective in protecting against noise-induced hearing loss. Here's the
lates news from the folks at the University of Florida.
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February 2009
Vitamin supplements can prevent hearing loss in laboratory animals,
according to two new studies, bringing investigators one step closer to
the development of a pill that could stave off noise-induced and perhaps
even age-related hearing loss in humans.
The findings will be reported Wednesday at the Association for Research
in Otolaryngology's annual conference in Baltimore by senior author
Colleen Le Prell, a researcher at the University of Florida.
The supplements used in the research studies are composed of
antioxidants - beta carotene and vitamins C and E - and the mineral
magnesium. When administered prior to exposure to loud noise, the
supplements prevented both temporary and permanent hearing loss in test
animals.
"What is appealing about this vitamin 'cocktail' is that previous
studies in humans, including those demonstrating successful use of these
supplements in protecting eye health, have shown that supplements of these
particular vitamins are safe for long-term use," said Le Prell, an
associate professor in the UF College of Public Health and Health
Professions' department of communicative disorders.
About 26 million Americans have noise-induced hearing loss, according
to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders,
the agency that funded the studies.
In the first study, UF, University of Michigan and OtoMedicine
scientists gave guinea pigs the vitamin supplements prior to a four-hour
exposure to noise at 110 decibels, similar to levels reached at a loud
concert. Researchers assessed the animals' hearing by measuring
sound-evoked neural activity and found that the treatment successfully
prevented temporary hearing loss in the animals.
In humans, temporary noise-induced hearing loss, often accompanied by
ringing in the ears, typically goes away after a few hours or days as the
cells in the inner ear heal. Because repeated temporary hearing loss can
lead to permanent hearing loss, the scientists speculate that prevention
of temporary changes may ultimately prevent permanent changes.
In the second, related study in mice, UF, Washington University in St.
Louis and OtoMedicine researchers showed that the supplements prevented
permanent noise-induced hearing loss that occurs after a single loud sound
exposure. The researchers found that the supplements prevented cell loss
in an inner ear structure called the lateral wall, which is linked to
age-related hearing loss, leading the scientists to believe these
micronutrients may protect the ear against age-related changes in hearing.
"I am very encouraged by these results that we may be able to find a
way to diminish permanent threshold shift with noise exposure," said Dr.
Debara Tucci, an associate professor of surgery in the otolaryngology
division at Duke University Medical Center. "I look forward to hearing Dr.
Le Prell's work and reviewing her data."
The research builds on previous studies that demonstrated hearing loss
is not just caused by intense vibrations produced by loud noises that tear
the delicate structures of the inner ear, as once thought, said Josef
Miller, who has studied the mechanisms of hearing impairment for more than
20 years and is a frequent collaborator of Le Prell's. Researchers now
know noise-induced hearing loss is largely caused by the production of
free radicals, which destroy healthy inner ear cells.
"The free radicals literally punch holes in the membrane of the cells,"
said Miller, the Townsend professor of communicative disorders at the
University of Michigan.
Miller is the co-founder of OtoMedicine, a University of Michigan
spinoff company that has patented AuraQuell, the vitamin supplement
formula used in the studies.
The antioxidant vitamins prevent hearing damage by "scavenging" the
free radicals. Magnesium, which is not a traditional antioxidant, is added
to the supplement mix to preserve blood flow to the inner ear and aid in
healing.
Antioxidant supplements can also provide "post-noise rescue," Le Prell
said. A previous study by Le Prell and Miller showed that antioxidants can
protect hearing days after exposure to loud noise.
"We found that the antioxidant combination of vitamin E and salicylate
- the active agent in aspirin -effectively prevented cell death and
permanent noise-induced hearing loss even when treatments were delayed up
to three days after noise insult," she said.
The researchers are collaborating on National Institutes of
Health-funded clinical trials of the vitamin supplements in college
students at UF who wear MP3 music players, and noise-exposed military
troops and factory workers in Sweden and Spain.
If the trials show that the vitamins are as effective in preventing
noise-induced hearing loss in humans as they have been in animals, Le
Prell and Miller envision an easy-to-use supplement that could come in the
form of a pill for people headed to a rock concert, a daily supplement for
factory workers or a nutritional bar included in soldiers' rations.
"Ear protection, such as ear plugs, is always the best practice for the
prevention of noise-induced hearing loss, but in those populations who
don't or can't wear hearing protection, for people in which mechanical
devices just aren't enough, and for people who may experience unexpected
noise insult, these supplements could provide an opportunity for
additional protection," Le Prell said.