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I have to come with an ad about the danger of loud music and how it affect 13 to 30 years of age.

2006-10-18 05:37:12 · 8 answers · asked by LISA R 1 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

8 answers

,It is not so much what it does to you now but 20 years from now you will find out what the damage caused during the loud music years. I know from personal experience. I am losing my hearing and now need hearing aids in both ears. Beware.

2006-10-18 05:43:05 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Every prolonged sound influence above 85 dB damages your hearing, no matter the age.

The table goes this way: you can listen to 8 hours to 85 dB of sounds (music) after which you get permanent damage.
For every 10 dBs plus, you shorthen the time by factor of 2. Which means that, by example, for 95 dB it takes 4 hours to get permanent damage, for 105 - 2 hours etc.

Maybe children and young adults have this recovery ability which is noticed as a deafened hearing - that is actually the recovery time, when the ear gets back to its normal functioning. But if you force it too much, it would be never able to recover fully.

When loud sounds are attacking the ear strings, they bend and stick to the cochlea (from the inside ear) and then you hear some *peep* sounds and experience deafening. Then they recover (they unstick) and continue to function normally. But if you attack them too much, they will break and will never unstick - and that's how you will loose receptors for a certain frequency. Usually the high frequency receptors die first as they are smaller and more fragile.

2006-10-18 05:46:47 · answer #2 · answered by Muad Dib 1 · 0 0

It can cause hearing lose in people of all ages. I would guess the article you read mentioned peoples 13-30 since they are more likely to listen to loud music.

2006-10-18 05:45:26 · answer #3 · answered by MUD 5 · 0 0

At fifty seven the guy isn't liking your style in music. At 87 the guy in all probability is having blood stress issues and each little thing sounds loud after a definite hour. i'm going with he would not like your style in music.

2016-10-19 22:47:56 · answer #4 · answered by mchellon 4 · 0 0

Inside your ears you have little hairs, when sound waves go through your ears the hairs vibrate. If sound is too much the sound waves are intesified causes the hairs the flatten. The more loud music you listen to the more you hairs will flatten and will not stand back up. If the hairs flatten and do not stand back up, you won't be able to hear.

2006-10-18 05:44:18 · answer #5 · answered by shontai 3 · 0 0

The same danger it is for people 1-12 and 31-death. It can damage your ears if it's too much.

2006-10-18 05:40:45 · answer #6 · answered by DiRTy D 5 · 0 0

Tinnitus - the ringing in the ears. It's the most common form of hearing loss. I would have someone surrounded by people who hum the same note. No matter where he goes, they follow him, humming. Even into the bedroom where they hum while he tries to sleep.

I have tinnitus and it drives me nuts. I wish I could go back in time and rip the Walkman off my head.

2006-10-18 05:47:29 · answer #7 · answered by itsnotarealname 4 · 0 0

ear drum damage.its a bummer when u can,t hear

2006-10-18 05:45:24 · answer #8 · answered by hector 4 · 0 0

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