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See our Highlights from the Hyperacusis Workshop at the 2013 ARO Meeting
What is Hyperacusis?
Hyperacusis is a condition that causes a person to be unable to tolerate everyday noise levels without pain. This condition may be initiated by a disease, by an acoustic trauma event (loud noise exposure), or induced by certain drugs.
Historically it has been referred to as "hypersensitivity of hearing" while some have used the term "decreased sound tolerance" (Jastreboff & Hazell, 2004). One definition given to hyperacusis is "the collapse of loudness tolerance" (J.A. Vernon, 2002). In the book Hyperacusis: Mechanisms, Diagnosis, and Therapies Dr. Baguley and Professor Andersson use "hyperacusis to describe the experience of inordinate loudness for sound that most people tolerate well, associated with a component of distress."


Hyperacusis Research was excited to participate in the
My symptoms of hyperacusis started after acoustic trauma from a carbon monoxide detector that went off in very close range to my ears. I purchased a faulty carbon monoxide detector for my home, which went off twice in one week. In my attempt to turn off the alarm, I exposed my ears to the extremely loud sound. Immediately after the first insult, I noticed pain and a blocked sensation in my ear. It was after the second episode that I realized something profound had happened to my ears. 









