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Hearing Damage After MumpsBy:
My niece in Poland never was vaccinated for mumps when she was a baby. That's something they don't do in Poland. She got mumps this past April and started to hear ringing in her ear. The doctors said it could be permanent. She is 12 years old. Is there any hope for her?
Diane L.
Unfortunately, the mumps virus is a well-known cause of "sensorineural hearing loss" (hearing loss due to damage to the inner ear or the hearing nerve). The virus, like CMV, rubella and rubeola, can cause labyrinthitis (inner-ear infection). With mumps, this is a very destructive infection. Any hearing loss that your niece suffered as a result of this infection is almost certainly permanent. The ringing in her ear is a sign of such an injury, just as pain is a sign of injury to most other parts of the body. If she has her hearing tested, it will most likely show some degree of nerve deafness.
Your niece does need to have her hearing tested, not so much to confirm the diagnosis, but mainly to determine whether she needs hearing aids. If her hearing loss is significant, it could affect her ability to learn in school -- and that could cause a lifetime of problems!
There is no cure for tinnitus (ringing in the ears) but there are a number of treatment options:
For more information, contact the American Tinnitus Association or see my column on nerve deafness and sudden hearing loss.
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