Prolonged mobile phone use may be linked to tinnitus
September 2010
Regularly using a mobile phone for at least four years seems to be
associated with a doubling in the risk of developing chronic tinnitus
(persistent ringing/roaring/hissing in the ear), indicates a small study
published online in Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
The prevalence of chronic tinnitus is increasing, and is currently around
10 to 15% in the developed world, say the authors. There are currently few
treatment options.
And while there are some obvious triggers, such as ear disorders and head
trauma, there are few known risk factors or clear explanations for this
trend. The high microwave energy produced by mobile phones during use has
been suggested as a possible culprit, but there has been no hard evidence to
date.
The authors compared 100 patients who required treatment for chronic
tinnitus, defined as lasting at least three months, with 100 randomly
selected people without the disorder, but matched for age and sex, over a
period of a year (2003-4).
Any patient with ear disease, noise induced impaired hearing, high blood
pressure, or who was on medication known to boost the risk of tinnitus was
excluded from the study.
All participants were then quizzed about the type of phone they used, and
where, as mobile phone output tends to be stronger in rural areas. They were
also asked about the intensity and duration of calls, ear preference, and
use of hand held devices.
Most tinnitus was one sided, with the left side accounting for 38 cases.
A similar number of patients described it as distressing 'most of the time.'
More than one in four (29%) also had associated vertigo.
Virtually all the participants were mobile users, but only 84 patients
and 78 in the comparison group were using a mobile when symptoms first
appeared. Some 17 patients and 12 of their peers had been using a mobile for
less than a year at that time.
Analysis of the results showed that the patients who had used a mobile
before the onset of tinnitus were 37% more likely to have the condition than
those in the comparison group. Those who used their mobiles for an average
of 10 minutes a day were 71% more likely to have the condition.
Most people used their phones on both ears, and those who had used a
mobile for four years or more were twice as likely to have tinnitus compared
with those in the comparison group.
The authors accept that people are likely to over/underestimate their
mobile phone usage and the length of calls. But they caution: "Considering
all potential biases and confounders, it is unlikely that the increased risk
of tinnitus from prolonged mobile phone use obtained in this study is
spurious."
They suggest that there is a plausible explanation for a potential link
between mobile phones and tinnitus as the cochlea and the auditory pathway
directly absorb a considerable amount of energy emitted by a mobile.
Source: www.eurekalert.org