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Smokers at higher risk of losing their hearing, suggests study

Smokers up to 60 per cent more likely to lose hearing than non-smokers

Alex Matthews-King
Health Correspondent
Thursday 15 March 2018 11:46 EDT
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As well as annual health checks, some japanese firms compensate staff who don't take smoke breaks
As well as annual health checks, some japanese firms compensate staff who don't take smoke breaks (Getty)

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Smokers are not just putting themselves at risk of heart disease and cancer but may also be endangering their hearing, Japanese researchers have said.

A new study has found that current smokers were at a higher risk of hearing loss than non-smokers – with that risk apparently increasing with each cigarette smoked. However, kicking the habit appears to reduce this risk again, the scientists said.

The authors said the findings provides “strong evidence” of a link, and called for new tobacco control measures to try and prevent or delay hearing loss.

The study, published in the journal Nicotine and Tobacco Research, tracked the lifestyle habits and health of more than 50,000 Japanese workers.

Using data drawn from records of annual health checks, which include a hearing test, the team looked at how workers’ ability to detect both high and low pitch (frequency) sounds changed.

The results show smokers were 60 per cent more likely to develop high-frequency hearing loss, compared to non-smokers, and 20 per cent more likely to lose some ability to hear lower frequency sounds.

One in 10 workers developed some form of hearing loss over the eight-year study, and the more cigarettes a worker smoked each day the higher their risk of developing hearing loss, the study found.

“These results suggest that smoking may be a causal factor for hearing loss, although further research would be required to confirm this,” the authors write.

The authors point out the study only shows a relationship between smoking and hearing loss, and that is does not prove one causes the other.

They also note that the smoking group were more likely to work in manual and heavy industries which can increase the likelihood of hearing loss, though they tried to control for this statistically.

Lead scientist Dr Huanhuan Hu, from the National Centre for Global Health and Medicine in Japan, said: “With a large sample size, long follow-up period, and objective assessment of hearing loss, our study provides strong evidence that smoking is an independent risk factor of hearing loss.

“These results provide strong evidence to support that smoking is a causal factor for hearing loss and emphasise the need for tobacco control to prevent or delay the development of hearing loss.”

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