1. Hearing and dementia: from ears to brain
- Author
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Jason D. Warren, Rimona S. Weil, Chris J.D. Hardy, Doris-Eva Bamiou, Jeremy C. S. Johnson, and Charles R. Marshall
- Subjects
Lewy Body Disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Comorbidity ,Disease ,Audiology ,frontotemporal dementia ,Updates ,Hearing ,Alzheimer Disease ,Perception ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Hearing Loss ,Everyday life ,Association (psychology) ,Aged ,media_common ,Aged, 80 and over ,AcademicSubjects/SCI01870 ,business.industry ,Neurodegeneration ,Brain ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Auditory Perception ,AcademicSubjects/MED00310 ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Alzheimer’s disease ,Frontotemporal dementia - Abstract
The association between hearing impairment and dementia has emerged as a major public health challenge, with significant opportunities for earlier diagnosis, treatment and prevention. However, the nature of this association has not been defined. We hear with our brains, particularly within the complex soundscapes of everyday life: neurodegenerative pathologies target the auditory brain, and are therefore predicted to damage hearing function early and profoundly. Here we present evidence for this proposition, based on structural and functional features of auditory brain organization that confer vulnerability to neurodegeneration, the extensive, reciprocal interplay between ‘peripheral’ and ‘central’ hearing dysfunction, and recently characterized auditory signatures of canonical neurodegenerative dementias (Alzheimer’s disease, Lewy body disease and frontotemporal dementia). Moving beyond any simple dichotomy of ear and brain, we argue for a reappraisal of the role of auditory cognitive dysfunction and the critical coupling of brain to peripheral organs of hearing in the dementias. We call for a clinical assessment of real-world hearing in these diseases that moves beyond pure tone perception to the development of novel auditory ‘cognitive stress tests’ and proximity markers for the early diagnosis of dementia and management strategies that harness retained auditory plasticity., Epidemiological data indicate that mid-life hearing loss is a modifiable risk factor for dementia, with potentially major diagnostic and therapeutic implications. Johnson et al. explore why realising this potential requires understanding hearing as a complex brain function that is especially vulnerable to neurodegeneration.
- Published
- 2020
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