Recent research has linked age-related hearing loss to impaired performance across cognitive domains and increased risk for dementia diagnosis. The data linking hearing impairment to incident late-life depression are more mixed but suggest that diminished hearing does increase risk for depression. Behavioral mechanisms may explain these associations, such as the withdrawal of older adults from situations in which they may have difficulty hearing and communicating, which may contribute to the development of social isolation, loneliness, and consequent cognitive decline and depression. At a neural level, chronic hearing loss leads to reduced activation in central auditory pathways, resulting in compensatory increased activation in the cognitive control network, dysfunctional auditory–limbic connectivity, and deafferentation-induced atrophy in frontal brain regions. These pathologic changes decrease cognitive performance and increase depression risk by reducing cognitive reserve, increasing executive dysfunction, and disrupting normative emotion reactivity and regulation. Based on the available data and informed by this model, evidence-based suggestions are proposed for clinicians treating older adults, and a research agenda is advanced to facilitate the development of rationally designed and age-appropriate psychiatric treatments for older adults with age-related hearing loss. First and foremost, treating hearing loss should be investigated as a means of improving cognitive and depressive outcomes in well-designed studies incorporating comprehensive psychiatric assessments, randomization, objective documentation of compliance, and analyses of treatment mediators that will facilitate further therapeutic development. Multimodal neuroimaging studies integrating audiometric, neuropsychological, and clinical assessments also are needed to further evaluate the model proposed.
ARHL was associated with increased depressive symptoms in older adults. Future studies should investigate whether treatment of ARHL may be an effective prevention and/or therapeutic strategy for depressive symptoms.
IMPORTANCE Age-related hearing loss is highly prevalent and has recently been associated with numerous morbid conditions of aging. Late-life depression is also prevalent and can be resistant to available treatments. Preliminary studies examining the association between hearing loss and late-life depression have been limited by subjective hearing measures, small sample sizes, and primarily white populations.OBJECTIVE To assess whether a cross-sectional association exists between objective audiometric hearing loss and depressive symptoms in older Hispanic adults.
ObjectivesAge‐related hearing loss (ARHL) is a prevalent condition associated with increased risk for depression and cognitive decline. This 12‐week prospective, double‐blind pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) of hearing aids (HAs) for depressed older adults with ARHL evaluated the feasibility of a novel research design.Methods/DesignN = 13 individuals aged ≥60 years with Major Depressive Disorder or Persistent Depressive Disorder and at least mild hearing loss (pure tone average ≥ 30 dB) were randomized to receive full‐ (active) vs low‐amplification (sham) HAs added to psychiatric treatment as usual. Duration of HA use in hours/day, adverse events frequency, attrition rate, and maintenance of the study blinding were the primary outcome measures.ResultsCompliance with HAs was excellent (>9 hours/day for both groups) and rates of adverse events and drop‐outs did not differ between groups. Preliminary data demonstrated differential improvement for active vs sham HAs on hearing functioning (Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly [nonparametric effect size (np‐ES) = 0.62]), depressive symptoms (Inventory for Depressive Symptomatology [np‐ES = 0.31]), cognition (Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status Immediate Memory [np‐ES = 0.25]), and general functioning (World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule [np‐ES = 0.53]). Significantly greater than 50% of both groups correctly guessed their treatment assignment, indicating incomplete concealment of treatment allocation.ConclusionsThis pilot RCT for ARHL and late‐life depression was feasible to execute and showed clinical promise, but improved methods of blinding the experimental treatments are needed. Larger studies should investigate whether hearing remediation may be an effective preventative and/or therapeutic strategy for late‐life depression and cognitive decline.
Background
Hearing loss (HL), late-life depression, and dementia are three prevalent and disabling conditions in older adults, but the inter-relationships between these disorders remain poorly understood.
Methods
N=8,529 participants ≥60 years who were free of cognitive impairment at baseline were analyzed from National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center Uniform Data Set. Participants had either No HL, Untreated HL, or Treated HL. Primary outcomes included depression (15-item Geriatric Depression Scale ≥5) and conversion to dementia. A longitudinal logistic model was fit to examine the association between HL and changes in depressive symptoms across time. Two Cox proportional hazards models were used to examine HL and the development of dementia: Model A included only baseline variables and Model B included time-varying depression to evaluate for the direct effect of changes in depression on dementia over time.
Results
Treated HL (vs. no HL) had increased risk for depression (OR=1.26, 95% CI 1.04-1.54, p=0.02) and conversion to dementia (HR=1.29, 95% CI 1.03-1.62, p=0.03). Baseline depression was a strong independent predictor of conversion to dementia (HR=2.32, 95% CI 1.77-3.05, p<.0001). Development/persistence of depression over time was also associated with dementia (HR=1.89, 95% CI 1.47-2.42, p<.0001), but only accounted for 6% of the direct hearing-dementia relationship (Model A logHR=0.26 [SE 0.12] to Model B logHR=0.24 [SE 0.12]) suggesting no significant mediation effect of depression.
Conclusions
Both HL and depression are independent risk factors for eventual conversion to dementia. Further understanding the mechanisms linking these later-life disorders may identify targets for early interventions to alter the clinical trajectories of at-risk individuals.
IMPORTANCE Psychological distress affects health and health care utilization. Hearing loss (HL) is highly prevalent and undertreated, and it may be a potentially modifiable risk factor for psychological distress. OBJECTIVE To investigate the association between HL, psychological distress, and mental health care utilization among adults in the United States. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This cross-sectional study included 25 665 individuals aged 18 years and older who participated in the 2017 National Health Interview Survey, a homebased nationally representative cross-sectional survey of noninstitutionalized US adults conducted by trained interviewers. EXPOSURES Self-reported hearing and hearing aid use. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Kessler psychological distress scale (scores Ն5 indicating moderate distress), self-reported use of medication to treat depression or anxiety symptoms, and use of mental health services in the past year. RESULTS A total of 25 665 adults (mean [SD] age 47.0 [18.1] years, 51.7% [95% CI, 51.0%-52.5%] women, weighted to be representative of the US adult population) were included in the analysis.
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