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Alzheimer's Made Worse By Uncorrected Hearing Loss: The Inside Story

Alzheimer's is predicted to afflict almost epidemic proportions of the elderly in the coming decades, yet the medical community in general still ignores the cognitive and health impact of unmitigated hearing loss.Reader inquiries may be directed to "Contact Us" or faxed to 719-676-6882.

From the archives of Hearing Health Magazine:

Alzheimer's Tidal Wave A Hearing Connection?
By Max S. Chartrand, Director of Research

There’s a tidal wave coming all right – the exponential growth of an aging population. Since risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD) increases with age, it has the potential to become the epidemic of the new century. Worldwide, the number of people with AD is projected to increase to 22 million by 2025 and 45 million by 2050.

Making matters worse, mental processing difficulties among older adults are so strongly identified with AD that many seniors are either unaware or in deep denial about the most pervasive forces behind cognitive disconnection: hearing loss and central auditory processing disorders.

When considering the mental health of the elderly, the measurement of hearing and auditory deficits is sorely neglected. Instead, these should be explored before other possible contributing factors to perceived problems with mental processing. Unfortunately, without these considerations, the feared cognitive disconnect will become self-fulfilling reality.

The Demographics of Aging

An alarming increase in the number of people living past the age of 65 in the U.S. is imminent. This is the age where most AD cases occur. Further, in the 85+ age group, an even greater demographic advance will be seen.

Matching the growth of these age groups with increased incidence of hearing loss, we find startling parallels between uncorrected hearing loss and the number of clinically suspected cases of AD.

Because the symptoms of uncorrected hearing loss mimic outward behavior characteristics of early onset Alzheimer’s, only a team that includes hearing and mental health professionals would be able to ascertain overlay components.

The predicted increase of AD also tracks the aging of America. In 1999 there were 36 million people over age 65 in the U.S., 4.2 million of whom were diagnosed with AD. By 2020, 52 million people will be over 65, with 8.9 million AD cases.

Lack of Professional Awareness
Hearing impairment among the AD population is twice that of the non-AD population, when matched for age and gender. This has been found in study after study. Yet fewer than 10 percent of hearing-impaired AD patients utilize amplification, compared to six in 10 hearing-impaired persons in the non-AD population. This means that those who most need aural rehabilitation tend to be the least likely to receive it.

Substantial professional and institutional barriers prevent people with AD and hearing loss from receiving hearing care. Among them are:

1) Lack of medical referral

2) Difficult-to-test stereotype

3) Lack of effective data

4) Inappropriate diagnosis and technology
Lack of access to ongoing care

Public Awareness

Only four percent of people with mild hearing loss use hearing aids. Few are aware that they have an impairment because they typically respond normally to the low-frequency vowel sounds of speech. High-frequency consonants, however, present more problems, particularly in noise or at distances. Professionals tend to underrate mild impairments, not realizing that this is where a marked cognitive disconnect begins in the older adult.

Still more tragic is the fact that in the moderate loss ranges, only 36 percent are using hearing technology. People in this category often find their lives dramatically altered through broken social bonds, reduced vocational and personal aspirations and, in many cases, depression, hypertension and underlying anxiety. Far too many are treated pharmacologically rather than receiving aural rehabilitation.

But the real tragedy is that only 54 percent of people with severe and profound hearing impairment in the U.S. utilize hearing aids, cochlear implants, and assistive devices. For the remaining 46 percent, lack of public and professional awareness of recent technological and clinical advancements has fostered dependence upon society and prevented achievement of their true potential.

Devil’s in the Details


A 1996 study at the University of South Florida found that 49 of 52 elderly persons diagnosed with memory disorders also had unmitigated severe hearing loss (called “serious hearing loss” in the study).

Their conclusion:
“Undiagnosed hearing loss interferes with learning, and makes people seem distracted, confused, disoriented and unresponsive, traits that might suggest Alzheimer’s disease.”

Other studies of elderly patients with uncorrected hearing loss indicate “feelings of helplessness, depression, passivity, and negativism.” Rapid and accelerated decline in various dementias were found due to uncorrected hearing loss in older adults. Social isolation and depression are found in yet other studies too numerous to cite here.

Hearing deficits, when uncorrected, can exacerbate memory and cognitive disorders. For instance, the memory pathways of the brain allow one to remember at the end of a sentence what was said at the beginning, a mental acrobatic feat that only humans can perform.

Putting Aural Rehab into the Picture


Nursing and administrative personnel who care for the majority of AD cases in institutions for the elderly claim that nearly all of their patients suffer from dementias of various etiologies. When queried about hearing aid use in their facilities, most respond that a few of their patients have hearing aids.

Upon closer examination, however, it is found that the “few” really don’t benefit from their instruments because of dead batteries, wax in the receivers or inappropriate control settings. “It’s just too much trouble to keep up with,” comes the refrain of those who most often must spend their finite resources regulating medication, meals and basic life care. Yet most individuals with AD would be on fewer medications, enjoy more independence in daily activities and, most of all, lead happier, more productive lives if their hearing health were on par with their other health needs.

Allow me to propose a more logical and effective pathway in the clinical protocols during the early stages of symptoms that point to AD and other dementias:

Individuals come first to their primary physician because of attentional and/or mild memory problems. The doctor performs the appropriate physical to exclude obvious physical/pharmacological contributors.

Physician refers the patient to a hearing health professional for a full hearing and speech evaluation. If a hearing loss is detected, treatment with hearing aids and aural rehabilitation is instituted.

If cognitive symptoms persist after a 90-day interval of aural rehabilitation, the patient is referred to a mental or neurological health professional trained in diagnosing and treating dementia.

The mental health professional refers the patient for nutritional analysis and counseling in tandem with the work of the other professionals.

Perhaps a speech-language pathologist is also indicated for treatment of possible perceptive or expressive aphasia, central auditory processing or other communicative problems. The services of a geriatrician or occupational therapist might also be warranted and enlisted.

Through a team approach, these professionals then work together for the benefit of the patient, recognizing the important contribution each will make in the rehabilitative process.

Conclusion

Hearing and mental health are intricately interconnected. The sense of “hearing” actually occurs in the brain, not the periphery apparatus. Hearing requires normal communication function in the brain in order to process appropriately. Likewise, in order for the human brain to function normally, good hearing health is required.

There is a glaring oversight in today’s clinical and medical model when diagnosing and treating AD. The most pervasive sensory filter of all, the vital sense of hearing, is totally ignored in current protocols. Meanwhile, billions of dollars are wasted, uncountable hours of medical resources squandered and millions of lives are held hostage. Needlessly so.



The (Economic) Toll of Alzheimer’s Disease
By Max Chartrand, Ph.D.

Persons with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) cost Medicare approximately 2.6 times more money than those who do not have the diagnosis, according to a recently released study sponsored by the AARP Andrus Foundation. The annual tab for a person with AD was around $18,500 if s/he was living in a community setting versus $33,500 when living in a nursing home.

Researchers at Duke University, under the direction of Donald Taylor, Ph.D., tabulated these figures using information from 18,000 respondents to the 1994 National Long Term Care Survey, a nationally representative sample of persons 65 and over.

The average paid by Medicare in 1994 was determined from the actual fees incurred for inpatient, outpatient, home health, skilled nursing facility, hospice and services such as physician payments and items such as durable medical equipment.

Medicare financed care, the study found, was influenced by how long a person had been diagnosed with AD – the longer diagnosed, the lower the costs. Once diagnosed, costs decreased by 10 percent each additional year, suggesting that fewer medical resources are invested in persons with a formal diagnosis of AD as their life expectancy drops, net of other variables.

Medicare costs represented only one-fourth of the total cost of caring for a person with AD.

Finding the Keys ... and a Cure?


As prognosticators broadcast the potential for disaster in a burgeoning population at greater risk for Alzheimer’s, researchers are racing to solve its mysteries. Leaders in the fields of neurology, genetics and medicine are making important discoveries daily. None is yet the definitive solution but each fills in a piece of the puzzle. And the new knowledge has enabled pharmaceutical companies to develop and test new forumlas for treatment and prevention.

Whether any of these breakthroughs can be significant enough and soon enough to avert an Alzheimer’s crisis is unclear. There are reasons to be optimistic, however. Among them is a growing collaboration between researchers, practitioners and caregivers. The first ever global summit was held in July 2000, World Alzheimer Congress 2000 (WAC), drew thousands of experts to Wash., D.C. By the time the July 9-18 conference was over, several bold new approaches were on the table.

The most promising research is honing in on the cause, perhaps ending a century-long debate. First identified in 1906 by Dr. Alois Alzheimer, one of two markers in brain tissue damaged by the disease has been considered the culprit. But which is it? Plaque, made up of the protein amyloid, which litters the space between brain cells that control memory and behavior? Tangles of another protein (tau) that aggregate within the cells? Or is it a combination of both?!

The most recent evidence clearly points to plaque, suggesting that it may be toxic to surrounding neurons, and that the amount of amyloid buildup does indeed correlate with the degree of dementia. Basing their work on this research, neurobiologists from Elan Pharmaceuticals reported at WAC that they have developed a vaccine which, in mice, prevents buildup of the protein and decreases existing plaque. Clinical investigations of whether it has the ability to prevent or cure the disease in humans could begin late this year. Meanwhile, a newly developed oral drug has demonstrated the ability to inhibit the buildup of plaque in animals and will also enter human trials soon.

In the therapeutic arena, findings unveiled at the conference offer hope for the first time of slowing the progression of more advanced Alzheimer’s. Researchers from the New York Univ. School of Medicine described the effects of a six-month treatment with the drug memantine on people with moderately severe and severe cases. Overall, although the disease was not reversed by the end of the study, those who received the drug performed significantly better in cognition and in daily life activities than those in a control group who had taken a placebo.

Other promising avenues under investigation are:


Finding genetic variants that put people at greater risk for Alzheimer’s.

Utilizing brain imaging technology to identify structural or functional variations which precede symptoms.

Investigating the relationship of cardiovascular risk factors with the incidence of Alzheimer’s (e.g., whether or not high-fat diets elevate risk or exercise, eating vegetables high in antioxidants or other “heart-healthy” actions decrease risk).

Whatever the near future brings, Dr. Dennis Selkoe, a leader in the battle against this elusive disease, predicts that “sooner than one might have dared to hope, Alzheimer’s will shed the veneer of invincibility that makes it such a terrifying affliction.” He also believes that practitioners will shortly have on hand not one but several drugs capable of slowing and perhaps halting the progress of the disease.

If Dr. Selkoe and others who share his optimism are right, this is heartening news indeed.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dr. Max Chartrand, a staff writer for Hearing Health, has studied Alzheimer’s for almost three decades. He is the director of DigiCare Hearing Research & Rehabilitation. digicarenet@aol.com


 




 

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