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New study: Early hearing decline may increase dementia risk

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A new study from long-running U.S. cohort data suggest that even mild hearing loss could influence how the brain ages.

Public-health researchers have increasingly pointed to hearing loss as an overlooked factor in ageing.

With the World Health Organization estimating that millions develop dementia each year, several experts argue that hearing assessments should play a larger role in prevention strategies.

Some neurologists quoted by Medical News Today note that subtle auditory changes often go unnoticed for years, limiting early intervention at a time when population ageing is accelerating.

Small loss, big effect

New work drawing on the Framingham Heart Study, a multidecade project tracking hearing measures, cognitive performance, and MRI results, offers further evidence.

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Researchers involved in the analysis report that adults with small but measurable drops in hearing displayed alterations in the neural pathways linking key brain regions.

According to JAMA Network Open, these structural differences emerged even when participants considered their hearing “mostly normal.”

The same cohort showed performance gaps on tasks that rely on managing information, organising steps, or sustaining attention.

Scientists reviewing the data suggest that reduced auditory input may place additional strain on cognitive systems already vulnerable to age-related change.

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Elevated risk

JAMA Network Open’s analysis further indicates that early-stage hearing loss was associated with a substantially higher probability of developing dementia, roughly two-thirds above the level seen among peers with normal hearing.

The increase was most evident in individuals carrying genetic markers linked to Alzheimer’s disease.

Although the study did not track how consistently people used hearing aids, participants who reported using them tended to show a lower risk profile, a pattern researchers say warrants closer examination in future work.

Sources: Medical News Today, World Health Organization, Framingham Heart Study, and JAMA Network Open.

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