Any Audiophiles Here Have Experience with Hearing Aids?


About 10 years ago, I was diagnosed with Meniere's Disease, a pretty unpleasant inner ear problem that is characterized by horrible, but luckily sporadic extreme vertigo, tinnitus, and low frequency hearing loss.  Dormant for about 6 years, it has come back in the last couple of years with a vengeance, with a lot of low frequency loss and overall difficulty hearing in the affected ear.  It generally affects only one ear, in this case my left ear.  It does not always lead to deafness, but definite hearing impairment.  I used to be able to really discern the difference between various cables and components, even if subtle.  Now, with my low frequency hearing loss and age-related high frequency hearing loss, I'm not sure that I can discern crap.  Music still sounds good, but one of my friends was over listening to various music and could instantly say that "this sounded flat" or the "soundstage had no depth," etc.  I could hear no difference at all.   My doctor is recommending a hearing aid.  Which brings me to the question:  does anyone here have experience with using a hearing aid, and how does a hearing aid affect your listening to music?  Does it restore some of your ability to recognize subtleties in the music?  Does it distort the music? What is a good hearing aid that will not distort the music?
moto_man

@secretguy , doing well.  No vertigo attacks since December 2023, but the tinnitus is still there, just not particularly loud.  a 2 or 3 and when I am not thinking about it, I really don't notice it.  The low frequency loss is still there as is the high frequency loss, but the system sounds great, and I suppose that I have adjusted to the way I hear things.  I'm sure it was sharper when I was younger but it's not bad now.  I'm not ready for hearing aids yet, as I can hear the TV and people pretty well, so I'll see.  But on the positive, I feel like my system is fantastic, so whether it is fantastic or because of my hearing it sounds fantastic, I am pretty happy!

This is a great topic. Hearing loss or impairment and hearing aids are often a very overlooked and misunderstood topic as it relates to high fidelity and the audiophile experience. I have heard people say that hearing aids don’t help the hearing impaired enjoy listening to music on a stereo for various reasons. This has never made sense to me since I feel that much like room treatments.... addressing the most important piece of audio equipment, one’s ears , is of first order importance. How can anyone with hearing loss or hearing impairment evaluate any piece of audio equipment in the hifi chain without first fixing the problem of hearing well?

I have hearing loss and tinnitus and wear hearing aids. I don’t know how I could ever go back to listening to my stereo system without them. It’s like not wearing your glasses and trying to see clearly.... it can’t be done. Once I saw a professional audiologist and got tested, it was identified which segment or band of the frequency spectrum I was NOT hearing well and I was able to get hearing aids adjusted to my needs. It’s a game changer.

@2psyop, thanks for the response.  I have to admit that it seems counterintuitive that hearing aids would make a system actually sound better, given that there is no way that that little miniaturized amplifier could have anywhere near the fidelity of a high end system.  I would think that the little amplifier in the hearing aids would actually introduce a lot of distortion in what one would hear as far as music goes.  in addition, it seems light one is introducing a little amplifier that will introduce distortion throughout the frequency range, and cut down on intangibles like soundstage, etc.  On the other hand, I can imagine that if the hearing aid just boosts the missing or reduced frequencies in order to correct the frequency response of one's ear, I suppose that it is enhancing frequencies that one would otherwise not hear and therefore, perhaps the distortion effect may not be as significant.  How has it affected your tinnitus?

moto-man

I can speak of my experiences.. understanding others might have a different one and some may be much more skeptical about the therapeutic value of hearing aids.

When I got my first pair of ReSound hearing aids from the VA some 7 years ago they were calibrated and tailored to my hearing loss. After leaving the fitting area and going to my car I had reached for a bag of potato chips on the passenger seat and heard clearly the crinkle of the plastic bag the chips were in. Recently I updated my hearing aids to Resound Nexia and upon putting on my Goretex jacket I heard the crinkle of the jacket (which sounds like a paper bag being smashed down) When I got home I decided to listen to the TV in my living room and I had heard the faint beep of my refrigerator alarm in the kitchen which tells me I didn’t fully close the door. These are sounds I was not hearing. The sounds that fall within the frequency range I happen to have a deficiency in. Later when I listened to music on my stereo, I was hearing sounds I had not been hearing (for who knows how long). I don’t really think about hearing aid amplifier distortion, I think about re-listening to music and hearing all that is there... that I have been missing.