Interactive effects of hearing aid use and cognitive function in patients with hearing loss

Author:

Okano Takayuki12ORCID,Yamamoto Yosuke3,Kuzuya Akira4,Egawa Naohiro4,Furuta Ichiro1,Mizuno Kayoko15ORCID,Fujino Kiyohiro6,Omori Koichi1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

2. Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery Fujita Health University Toyoake Japan

3. Department of Healthcare Epidemiology, Graduate School of Medicine and Public Health Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

4. Department of Neurology, Graduate School of Medicine Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

5. Department of Pharmacoepidemiology, Graduate School of Medicine and Public Health Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

6. Department of Otolaryngology Shiga General Hospital Moriyama Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThere has been a significant increase in scientific investigations of the hearing‐dementia association among the research on potentially modifiable risk factors for cognitive impairment. We tested two clinical questions. Analysis 1: does persistent hearing aid (HA) use decrease the decline in cognitive function caused by ageing? Analysis 2: does cognitive function at the time of HA fitting predict future persistent HA use?MethodsThis case–control study performed at two referral centres reported data obtained over a 4.5‐year period. We recruited a group of patients with cognitive decline, aged 65 or older with or without hearing loss. The intervention consisted of the use of HAs. The primary outcome measures were adherence to continuous HA use and cognitive function measured using the Japanese version of the Mini‐Mental State Examination Test and the Reading Cognitive Test Kyoto.ResultsEighteen HA users and 18 controls were included in the first analysis. HA use was associated with a deceleration of cognitive decline 12 months later. In the second analysis, 11 participants with good adherence to HA use were compared with 12 participants who showed poor adherence to HA use. Among the variables employed in this study, cognitive function measured using the Reading Cognitive Test Kyoto was significantly lower in participants with poor adherence to HA.ConclusionsHA use in cognitively impaired individuals with hearing loss can slow age‐related cognitive decline. Cognitively impaired people with hearing loss who fail to commit to HA use tend to have lower cognitive measurement scores before HA fitting. HA use is generally more challenging as people age and their cognitive abilities decline. Therefore, it is desirable that HAs be used when hearing loss and dementia are in their early stages.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Publisher

Wiley

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