Tinnitus Among Medical Students Using Personal Sound System

Introduction Statistical data on prevalence of tinnitus in India and on the relationship between exposure to recreational sound/music and the presence of tinnitus are scarce. This study was conducted to assess relationship between tinnitus and the use of personal sound system(PSS) in medical studen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Syam Sasidharan, Sheetal Rai, Gangadhara Somayaji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Association of Otolaryngologists of India, West Bengal 2017-04-01
Series:Bengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://bjohns.in/journal/index.php/bjohns/article/view/197
id doaj-e2768f7da87b443d96c047558841d846
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e2768f7da87b443d96c047558841d8462020-11-25T00:14:47ZengThe Association of Otolaryngologists of India, West BengalBengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery2395-23932395-24072017-04-012512733108Tinnitus Among Medical Students Using Personal Sound SystemSyam Sasidharan0Sheetal Rai1Gangadhara Somayaji2Yenepoya UniversityYenepoya UniversityYenepoya UniversityIntroduction Statistical data on prevalence of tinnitus in India and on the relationship between exposure to recreational sound/music and the presence of tinnitus are scarce. This study was conducted to assess relationship between tinnitus and the use of personal sound system(PSS) in medical students. Materials and Methods A questionnaire based study was conducted on 100 randomly selected medical students to assess their sound habits with the use of PSS. Information on commonly used intensity, frequency, duration of use, type of earphones and severity of tinnitus was sought. Conventional frequency audiometry (0.25-8kHz) was also performed. Result The prevalence of tinnitus was found to be 33%, which was on the higher side of the global prevalence data. All the medical students surveyed in this study used personal sound system. Majority of the students (45%) used PSS less than 1 hour daily. More than 60% of the students complaining of tinnitus preferred louder settings in their PSS. Discussion The most common personal sound system used was mobile phones. No statistically significant association was seen with relation to the type of personal sound system, the type of ear phone used, average duration of use and hearing loss. Tinnitus was found to have statistically significant association with volume in our study with majority having tinnitus listening to higher levels of sound. Conclusion Use of personal sound system is common in medical students. Though duration of use of the personal sound system was not associated with the complaint of tinnitus, exposure to louder sounds had statistically significant association with tinnitus.http://bjohns.in/journal/index.php/bjohns/article/view/197TinnitusStudents, MedicalCell PhonesLeisure ActivitiesNoise.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Syam Sasidharan
Sheetal Rai
Gangadhara Somayaji
spellingShingle Syam Sasidharan
Sheetal Rai
Gangadhara Somayaji
Tinnitus Among Medical Students Using Personal Sound System
Bengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery
Tinnitus
Students, Medical
Cell Phones
Leisure Activities
Noise.
author_facet Syam Sasidharan
Sheetal Rai
Gangadhara Somayaji
author_sort Syam Sasidharan
title Tinnitus Among Medical Students Using Personal Sound System
title_short Tinnitus Among Medical Students Using Personal Sound System
title_full Tinnitus Among Medical Students Using Personal Sound System
title_fullStr Tinnitus Among Medical Students Using Personal Sound System
title_full_unstemmed Tinnitus Among Medical Students Using Personal Sound System
title_sort tinnitus among medical students using personal sound system
publisher The Association of Otolaryngologists of India, West Bengal
series Bengal Journal of Otolaryngology and Head Neck Surgery
issn 2395-2393
2395-2407
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Introduction Statistical data on prevalence of tinnitus in India and on the relationship between exposure to recreational sound/music and the presence of tinnitus are scarce. This study was conducted to assess relationship between tinnitus and the use of personal sound system(PSS) in medical students. Materials and Methods A questionnaire based study was conducted on 100 randomly selected medical students to assess their sound habits with the use of PSS. Information on commonly used intensity, frequency, duration of use, type of earphones and severity of tinnitus was sought. Conventional frequency audiometry (0.25-8kHz) was also performed. Result The prevalence of tinnitus was found to be 33%, which was on the higher side of the global prevalence data. All the medical students surveyed in this study used personal sound system. Majority of the students (45%) used PSS less than 1 hour daily. More than 60% of the students complaining of tinnitus preferred louder settings in their PSS. Discussion The most common personal sound system used was mobile phones. No statistically significant association was seen with relation to the type of personal sound system, the type of ear phone used, average duration of use and hearing loss. Tinnitus was found to have statistically significant association with volume in our study with majority having tinnitus listening to higher levels of sound. Conclusion Use of personal sound system is common in medical students. Though duration of use of the personal sound system was not associated with the complaint of tinnitus, exposure to louder sounds had statistically significant association with tinnitus.
topic Tinnitus
Students, Medical
Cell Phones
Leisure Activities
Noise.
url http://bjohns.in/journal/index.php/bjohns/article/view/197
work_keys_str_mv AT syamsasidharan tinnitusamongmedicalstudentsusingpersonalsoundsystem
AT sheetalrai tinnitusamongmedicalstudentsusingpersonalsoundsystem
AT gangadharasomayaji tinnitusamongmedicalstudentsusingpersonalsoundsystem
_version_ 1725388526351024128