(Press-News.org) Hearing loss is linked to a heightened risk of developing heart failure, with the psychological distress caused by the impairment taking a key role in the observed association, finds a large long term study, published online in the journal Heart.
Hearing loss is increasingly common, particularly as people age, while the prevalence of heart failure is also on the rise, affecting around 64 million people worldwide, note the researchers.
While impaired hearing is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, principally, it is thought, as a result of the resulting social detachment, no study has comprehensively examined the association between objectively measured hearing ability and the risk of developing heart failure.
In a bid to plug this knowledge gap, the researchers mined the data of 164,431 participants from the UK Biobank, 4369 of whom wore hearing aids. None had heart failure to begin with. The average age of participants was 56, and 89,818 (around 55%) were women.
Their hearing ability was objectively measured using the validated Digit Triplets Test and the speech-reception-threshold (SRT). Participants (160,062) who didn’t wear hearing aids were categorised into three groups according to their performance on the DTT: normal (140,839; 88%); insufficient (16,759;10.5%); and poor (2464; 1.5%).
Comprehensive background information on current health, lifestyle, and psychosocial factors was collected via questionnaires.
Social isolation was assessed using a composite definition in the UK Biobank derived from scores (1-3) for the number of people living in the household, frequency of friend or family visits, and leisure or social activities. Those with a score of 2 or 3 were classified as socially isolated.
Psychological distress was assessed using a four-item version of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4), with a score ranging from 0 to 12. Neuroticism, a depression-related personality trait, was assessed using 12 questions from the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire-Revised Short Form.
The development of heart failure among those who were not genetically predisposed to the condition was identified through medical records and death certificates during an average follow up of 11½ years.
During this period, 4449 (nearly 3%) of the participants developed heart failure. SRT levels were significantly positively associated with the risk of developing the condition in participants who didn’t wear hearing aids.
Compared with those with normal hearing, the adjusted heightened risks of developing heart failure were 15% and 28%, respectively, for insufficient and poor hearing, and 26% for hearing aid use.
The associations between SRT levels and heart failure risk were stronger in those without coronary heart disease or stroke at the start of the study.
SRT levels were significantly positively associated with social isolation, psychological distress, and neuroticism among those who didn’t wear hearing aids. And these factors had a substantial role in the observed associations in participants who didn’t wear hearing aids, accounting for 3%, 17%, and 3%, respectively, of the heightened risk of heart failure development.
When the scores for social isolation, psychological distress, and neuroticism were combined among those who had full data on these factors, the total mediating effect was just over 9%.
This was less than the sum of the mediating effects of each individual factor, which amounted to 19.5%, suggesting overlap and interaction between these three factors, say the researchers.
This is an observational study, and as such, can’t establish cause and effect. And data on hearing were collected only at the start of the study, while the participants in the current study were mainly of European descent and healthier than the UK general population, they acknowledge.
But there are plausible biological explanations for their findings, they say. “The rich distribution of capillaries in the…cochlea and the high metabolic demand of the inner ear may render these regions more sensitive to systemic vascular disorders rather than just local circulatory issues,” they suggest.
“Therefore, hearing impairment may reflect vascular health and serve as an early and sensitive predictor of cardiovascular disease, including [heart failure],” they add.
“Of note, both the participants who used hearing aids and those with poor hearing had a similarly significant increase in the risk of incident [heart failure], suggesting that while hearing aids can improve auditory function, they may not address the underlying vascular issues that contribute to the risk of [heart failure],” they continue.
And they explain: “Because hearing problems can lead to difficulties in speech comprehension and poor engagement in social activities, people with hearing impairment are more likely to experience social isolation, psychological distress, anxiety and depression than people without hearing impairment.
“These psychological factors may increase the activity of the sympathetic nervous system and the hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal axis, and enhance inflammation and oxidative stress, thereby accelerating atherosclerosis, increasing peripheral stress, and promoting the development of cardiac remodelling.”
The findings highlight the importance of integrating hearing health assessments into broader cardiovascular risk evaluation frameworks, they conclude. And strengthening psychological intervention in people with hearing impairment may be key to curbing the risk of heart failure, they suggest.
END
Hearing loss linked to heightened heart failure risk
Distress caused by impairment seems to have key role in observed association
2025-04-08
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Relaxation techniques may help lower high blood pressure—at least in the short term
2025-04-08
Relaxation techniques may help lower high blood pressure—at least in the short term—but the longer term effects are unclear, finds a pooled data analysis of the existing research published in the open access journal BMJ Medicine.
And the risk of bias in the existing body of research means that further, more rigorously designed and longer studies are needed to confirm whether these techniques have a constructive role in the treatment of high blood pressure, conclude the researchers.
High blood pressure affects around a third of 30-79 year olds and is one of the leading attributable causes of deaths in both men and women, note the researchers.
While ...
Bans on outdoor junk food ads derailed by industry lobbying
2025-04-08
Plans to ban junk food adverts from bus stops and billboards to protect public health are being stymied by advertising industry lobbying, reveals an investigation published by The BMJ today.
The BMJ sent Freedom of Information (FOI) requests to 52 of the 317 councils in England to uncover how advertising firms and lobby groups were targeting council policies to restrict ‘out-of-home’ junk food adverts.
McDonald's was the largest out-of-home advertiser in 2024 with a spend of £86.3 million, according to trade body Outsmart. Others in the top 20 include Pepsico, Coca Cola, KFC, Mars and Mondelez, the US owners of Cadbury.
The FOI responses ...
Prescribing parkrun is a retrograde step, argues doctor
2025-04-08
General practitioners are now “prescribing" parkrun for their patients as part of a social prescribing initiative to promote preventative care. But in The BMJ today, Dr Margaret McCartney argues that turning parkrun into a prescription medicalises a walk in the park and is a retrograde step.
Parkrun is an organised, timed, and free 5 km run, jog, walk, or wheel on Saturday mornings—in parks, on beaches, or on trails around the world but mainly in the UK, where it originated.
Parkrun ...
AMS science preview: Fire weather, bumpy hurricane flights, climate extremes and protests
2025-04-08
The American Meteorological Society continuously publishes research on climate, weather, and water in its 12 journals. Many of these articles are available for early online access–they are peer-reviewed, but not yet in their final published form. Below are some recent examples.
JOURNAL ARTICLES
Multi-factor Change in Western U.S. Nighttime Fire Weather
Journal of Climate
Western fires become less prone to “lay down” at night. Wildfires typically calm down at night–a crucial break for firefighters–yet firefighter and satellite measurements confirm increased nocturnal fire activity in the western U.S. from 1980 to 2020. This study shows increases in meteorological ...
People’s brain activity shows their political affiliation while buying food, study shows
2025-04-08
People’s political affiliation can be shown in their brain activity when they carry out mundane chores such as buying food, a new study shows.
How the brain reacts to food purchasing decisions can be used to determine people’s political affiliation with almost 80 per cent accuracy, researchers have found.
Although buying eggs and milk can lack emotional potency and political content, understanding how the neural systems lead people to make indistinguishable choices may help to explain the broader mechanisms of partisanship.
Experts from Iowa State University, the ...
Phage therapy at a crossroads: global experts unite in Berlin for groundbreaking 2025 Congress
2025-04-08
Berlin, Germany – April 7, 2025 — With antimicrobial resistance rising as one of the world's most pressing health threats, the 8th World Congress on Targeting Phage Therapy 2025 will bring together the global phage community to shape the future of infection control and microbiota modulation. Taking place on June 10–11, 2025, at the DoubleTree by Hilton Berlin Ku'damm, this landmark event will showcase cutting-edge research, real-world clinical insights, and groundbreaking applications of bacteriophage therapy across medicine, oncology, agriculture, and industry.
Strategic Importance
Phage therapy has entered a new ...
SwRI launches BEAMoCap™ markerless motion capture for 3D animation in gaming, film
2025-04-08
SAN ANTONIO — April 8, 2025 – Southwest Research Institute has launched a new markerless motion capture system that simplifies how film and gaming studios capture human movement for 3D animations. SwRI’s Biomechanical Evaluation and Animation Motion Capture (BEAMoCap™) tool converts video into realistic 3D animations without the conventional marker suits worn by actors.
BEAMoCap won a 2025 Technology Innovation Award from the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB). SwRI staff accepted the award at ...
Open access institutional membership - Xiamen University and Bentham Science
2025-04-08
Xiamen University (XMU) has joined the Bentham Science Institutional Membership Program. This membership enables XMU researchers to publish their articles as Open Access under the CC-BY 4.0 license at concessionary rates in any Bentham Science journal. Through collaborations with institutions and organizations worldwide, Bentham Science is committed to promoting open research and fostering scientific advancements in science, medicine, and technology.
Xiamen University (XMU), founded in 1921, is a prestigious comprehensive university ...
Two mixtures of common food additives, including aspartame, sucralose, xanthan & guar gums, modified starches, carrageenan and citric acid, are linked with slightly increased risk of type II diabetes,
2025-04-08
Two mixtures of common food additives, including aspartame, sucralose, xanthan & guar gums, modified starches, carrageenan and citric acid, are linked with slightly increased risk of type II diabetes, per French cohort study of more than 100,000 adults
In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Medicine: https://plos.io/3RkrNLv
Article title: Food additive mixtures and type 2 diabetes incidence: Results from the NutriNet-Santé prospective cohort
Author countries: France
Funding: see manuscript END ...
Certain food additive mixtures may be associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes
2025-04-08
Food additive mixtures are an everyday feature of our diets, especially through ultra-processed foods. Until recently, safety evaluations of these additives have been conducted substance by substance due to a lack of data on the effect of them ingested together. In a new study, researchers from Inserm, INRAE, Sorbonne Paris Nord University, Paris Cité University and Cnam, as part of the Nutritional Epidemiology Research Team (CRESS-EREN), examined the possible links between exposure to mixtures of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Nontraditional risk factors shed light on unexplained strokes in adults younger than 50
Extreme drought contributed to barbarian invasion of late Roman Britain, tree-ring study reveals
Antibiotic-resistant E. albertii on the rise in Bangladeshi chicken shops
Veterinary: UK dog owners prefer crossbreeds and imports to domestic pedigree breeds
Study links climate change to rising arsenic levels in paddy rice, increasing health risks
Study indicates that risky surgery after a stroke due to carotid artery stenosis is no longer necessary for majority of patients
Blood pressure: New research shows a changing climate may jeopardise global blood supply
Start of US hunting season linked to increased firearm incidents, including violent crimes and suicide
New system could help reduce unnecessary surgery to prevent strokes
Strongest hints yet of biological activity outside the solar system
Children face ‘lifelong psychological wounds’ from entrenched inequities made worse by pandemic, doctor warns
New research reveals socio-economic influences on how the body regulates eating
Unhealthy metabolic profile sharply increases risk of breast cancer returning and subsequent death from breast cancer among those who have survived the disease
Marine radar can accurately monitor vessel speeds to protect whales, study finds
National Center to Reframe Aging teams up with West End Home Foundation
How do age, sex, hormones and genetics affect dementia biomarkers in the blood?
NSF NOIRLab astronomer discovers oldest known spiral galaxy in the Universe
Iron Age purple dye "factory" in Israel was in operation for almost 500 years, using mollusks in large-scale specialized manufacturing process
Even vegans who get enough total protein may fall short for some essential amino acids
RoboBee comes in for a landing
“Ban-the-Box” policy did not effectively help job applicants with criminal records in one analysis
Sunscreen, clothes and caves may have helped Homo sapiens survive 41,000 years ago
"Big surprise": astronomers find planet in perpendicular orbit around pair of stars
Astronomers find rare twist in exoplanet’s twin star orbit
Crystal clues on Mars point to watery and possibly life-supporting past
Microbes in Brooklyn Superfund site teach lessons on fighting industrial pollution
Porous and powerful: How multidirectional grading enhances piezoelectric plate performance
Study finds dramatic boost in air quality from electrifying railways
Bite-sized chunks of chicken with the texture of whole meat can be grown in the lab
A compact, mid-infrared pulse generator
[Press-News.org] Hearing loss linked to heightened heart failure riskDistress caused by impairment seems to have key role in observed association