yes
The ability to regain lost hearing depends on the cause of the hearing loss. Conductive hearing loss, caused by issues in the middle or outer ear, can sometimes be treated with medication or surgery. Sensorineural hearing loss, due to damage to the inner ear or auditory nerve, is generally permanent, but hearing aids or cochlear implants can help improve hearing.
AnswerA hearing aid will not accelerate your hearing loss or improve the underlying condition. You hearing loss could progress due to age, genetics, noise or medications but not the hearing aid.Ok but does using an aid have any effect on further loss in other words if not using an aid does a condition deteriorate quicker than if wearing one?
conversion disorder
no
This type of hearing loss is often noticed by those around you first. For instance you might turn up the volume of your television much louder than other people would like.
Usually it isn't. When hearing loss becomes bothersome or problematic, then a hearing aid may be used. In children there can be temporary mild hearing loss due to ear infections (especially otitis media). After antibiotic treatment, normal hearing (or, at least, hearing that was normal for that person before the infection) will return.
It doesnt always get worse. but it never gets better. It only depends on how much you surround youself by noise. Loud noise will destroy your hearing loss over a long period of time.
due to nerve fatigue.
a prolonged disorder of eating due to loss of appetite.
That's true. :)
To restore hearing loss, which is usually due to otosclerosis, stapedectomy is performed
sensory hearing loss, refers to damage to the organ of Corti and the acoustic nerve. Prolonged exposure to loud noise is the leading cause of sensory hearing loss.