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Targeting dysregulation of redox homeostasis in noise-induced hearing loss: Oxidative stress and ROS signaling.

Free Radical Biology & Medicine, 2019
Hearing loss caused by exposure to recreational and occupational noise remains a worldwide disabling condition and dysregulation of redox homeostasis is the hallmark of cochlear damage induced by noise exposure.
A. Fetoni   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Preventing noise-induced hearing loss

Nursing Clinics of North America, 2002
Noise-induced hearing loss is a significant, irreversible impairment, but one that is preventable. The numbers of persons, including children, exposed to high noise is increasing, necessitating the use of hearing protection if the noise cannot be reduced to a safe level.
openaire   +2 more sources

Noise-induced hearing loss

Pediatrics, 2002
To the Editor — Niskar et al’s 1 estimate of 5.2 million US children with noise-induced threshold shifts (NITS) was unexpectedly high for a condition known primarily as an occupational hazard. It was particularly surprising that 1 out of 12 of the youngest children, aged 6–11, already had NITS. Some other study findings were also remarkable.
llmari Pyykkö   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Drug development for noise-induced hearing loss

Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery, 2020
Introduction Excessive exposure to noise is a common occurrence that contributes to approximately 50% of the non-genetic hearing loss cases. Researchers need to develop standardized preclinical models and identify molecular targets to effectively develop
I. Varela-Nieto   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Noise-Induced Hearing Loss

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1966
To the Editor:— Your editorial on "Noise-Induced Hearing Loss" ( 195 :1054, 1966) brought up the thought that conditions which take many years to produce could be very difficult to verify experimentally. I find that anyone in a vocation entailing noise usually has a hearing loss after working a number of years in it. Farmers (tractors without mufflers)
openaire   +1 more source

Noise-induced hearing loss.

American family physician, 2000
Hearing loss caused by exposure to recreational and occupational noise results in devastating disability that is virtually 100 percent preventable. Noise-induced hearing loss is the second most common form of sensorineural hearing deficit, after presbycusis (age-related hearing loss).
openaire   +3 more sources

Noise-induced hearing loss

2018
This chapter discusses Coles, Lutman, and Buffin’s paper on noise-induced hearing loss including the design of the study (outcome measures, results, conclusions, and a critique).
openaire   +1 more source

Noise-induced hearing loss

Abstract Inner ear injury from noise has been well described in human postmortem studies and from experimental animal studies. The most vulnerable structures in the cochlea are the outer hair cells; initially, the hair cell stereocilia lose their stiffness and hence the ability to vibrate, resulting in a temporary threshold shift ...
Utku Yılmaz   +2 more
  +4 more sources

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