Mixed Hearing Loss Treatment in Bel Air, Lutherville, Nottingham, MD & Warrenton, VA
If someone has told you that you have ‘mixed hearing loss,’ it is natural to have questions. What does mixed actually mean? Why is it different from regular hearing loss? Can it be treated? And what happens next?
This page answers all of those questions in plain language — no medical background needed. Mixed hearing loss is more common than most people realize, and with the right evaluation and treatment plan, most people with this type of hearing loss are able to significantly improve how they hear every day.
At Hearing Assessment Center, LLC, in Bel Air, Lutherville, Nottingham, MD & Warrenton, VA, we work with patients who have all types of hearing loss including mixed. If you would like to get evaluated, call or text us at 410-816-9723.
What Is Mixed Hearing Loss?
Mixed hearing loss means that two different things are affecting your hearing at the same time — a problem in the outer or middle ear AND a problem in the inner ear or hearing nerve.
To understand why this matters, it helps to know how hearing normally works. Sound travels a specific path through your ear:
- First, sound waves enter your outer ear (the visible part) and travel down the ear canal
- The sound hits your eardrum and makes it vibrate
- Those vibrations pass through three tiny bones in your middle ear
- The vibrations then reach the inner ear (called the cochlea), which converts them into electrical signals
- Those signals travel through the hearing nerve to your brain, which interprets them as sound
Hearing loss is categorized by where in this pathway the problem occurs:
Conductive Hearing Loss
Key characteristic: often temporary or medically treatable.
Sensorineural Hearing Loss
Key characteristic: usually permanent but manageable with hearing aids.
Mixed Hearing Loss
Key characteristic: requires addressing both components — treatment is more complex but very effective.
Most people think of hearing loss as one single thing. Mixed hearing loss is a reminder that your hearing system has multiple parts and sometimes more than one part is affected at the same time. This is actually quite common, particularly in older adults who have age-related inner ear changes alongside a separate, often treatable middle ear issue.
A helpful way to think about it: Imagine trying to listen to music with two problems at once: the speakers are damaged (inner ear) AND the volume knob is broken at a low setting (middle ear). Even if you fix the volume knob, the speakers are still not working perfectly. And even with damaged speakers, fixing the volume knob helps. Mixed hearing loss works the same way — treating both components gives you the best outcome.
Symptoms of Mixed Hearing Loss
Because mixed hearing loss combines two types, the symptoms can reflect both. They may come on gradually, appear suddenly, or fluctuate depending on whether a middle ear condition (like an infection) is getting better or worse.
The most common signs include:
Difficulty Hearing Soft Sounds
Trouble Understanding Speech in Noise
Muffled or Distorted Sound
Frequently Asking People to Repeat Themselves
Turning Up the TV Louder Than Others Prefer
Feeling of Fullness or Pressure in the Ear
Tinnitus — Ringing, Buzzing, or Hissing
Your Own Voice Sounds Different to You
Ear Pain or Discomfort
When to seek evaluation: If you recognize two or more of these symptoms — particularly if they have lasted more than a few weeks or are getting worse — it is worth getting a proper hearing evaluation. The earlier mixed hearing loss is identified, the more treatment options are available. Waiting typically makes both components harder to address.
What Causes Mixed Hearing Loss?
Mixed hearing loss develops when a person has separate causes affecting the middle ear and the inner ear at the same time. In many cases, these are entirely unrelated to each other — one problem did not cause the other. Understanding the cause of each component matters because each one is treated differently.
Causes of the Conductive Component (Outer or Middle Ear)
The conductive component of mixed hearing loss is often temporary and treatable. Common causes include:
- Earwax buildup blocking the ear canal — one of the most common and easiest to address
- Ear infections (otitis media) causing fluid or inflammation in the middle ear
- Otosclerosis — an abnormal growth of bone in the middle ear that prevents the small bones from moving freely
- Perforated or damaged eardrum from infection, injury, or sudden pressure changes
- Cholesteatoma — an abnormal skin growth behind the eardrum that can damage middle ear structures over time
- Fluid behind the eardrum that has not resolved
- Structural problems from injury or surgery
Causes of the Sensorineural Component (Inner Ear or Hearing Nerve)
The sensorineural component is usually permanent — the inner ear does not regenerate damaged cells. Common causes include:
- Age-related hearing loss (presbycusis) — the most common cause, occurring gradually over decades
- Prolonged noise exposure — from work, music, machinery, or other sustained loud environments
- Genetics — some people are simply more susceptible to inner ear changes over time
- Certain medications (ototoxic drugs) that damage inner ear cells as a side effect
- Illnesses that affect the inner ear, including Meniere’s disease, viral infections, and autoimmune conditions
- Head trauma that damages the cochlea or auditory nerve
Why both components are often present together in older adults: Age-related sensorineural hearing loss tends to develop slowly over time. But as we age, we are also more likely to develop middle ear conditions — fluid buildup, earwax, or otosclerosis — that then layer on top of that existing inner ear loss. This is the most common pattern of mixed hearing loss: the inner ear was already showing age-related changes, and then a separate, often treatable middle ear issue developed on top of it.
How Audiologists Identify Mixed Hearing Loss — The Air-Bone Gap
If you have ever seen an audiogram — the chart that maps your hearing results — you may have noticed two different lines plotted for each ear. Understanding what those two lines mean is key to understanding how mixed hearing loss is diagnosed.
Air Conduction Testing
In the standard part of a hearing test, you wear headphones and respond when you hear tones at different pitches and volumes. This is called air conduction testing — it tests how well sound travels through the entire hearing pathway, from your ear canal all the way to your brain.
Bone Conduction Testing
In bone conduction testing, a small vibrating device is placed on the bone behind your ear. It sends sound vibrations directly to the inner ear, bypassing the outer ear and middle ear entirely. This tells your audiologist whether the inner ear itself is working properly, separate from whether sound can travel through the outer and middle ear.
What the Air-Bone Gap Tells the Audiologist
When the air conduction results are worse than the bone conduction results, there is a gap between the two lines on the audiogram. This is called the air-bone gap.
Conductive hearing loss: bone conduction results are normal, air conduction results are poor. Large air-bone gap.
Sensorineural hearing loss: both bone and air conduction results are poor to the same degree. No air-bone gap.
Mixed hearing loss: both bone and air conduction results are poor, BUT the air conduction results are worse than bone conduction. There IS an air-bone gap — meaning the inner ear has a problem AND there is an additional blockage in the outer or middle ear on top of that.
In plain English: If you wear headphones and the sound is still unclear, the problem is in your inner ear or hearing nerve. If bypassing the headphones (using bone conduction) improves things, the problem is also in the outer or middle ear. Mixed hearing loss means you have both problems at once — and the audiogram clearly shows both.
How Is Mixed Hearing Loss Diagnosed?
Getting an accurate diagnosis is the most important step. Mixed hearing loss cannot be identified from symptoms alone — it requires a comprehensive hearing evaluation performed by a qualified audiologist.
Pure-Tone Audiometry
Why it matters: identifies the air-bone gap that distinguishes mixed from pure sensorineural or conductive loss.
Tympanometry
Why it matters: reveals middle ear problems like fluid, eardrum perforation, or stiffness from otosclerosis.
Speech Audiometry
Why it matters: shows the real-world impact of the hearing loss and helps guide treatment.
Otoacoustic Emissions (OAE)
Why it matters: helps separate the inner ear component from middle ear problems.
Physical Ear Examination
Why it matters: can immediately identify earwax buildup, infections, or visible eardrum damage.
Case History Review
Why it matters: helps identify likely causes of each component — crucial for treatment planning.
A full evaluation at Hearing Assessment Center, LLC will determine not only that you have mixed hearing loss, but specifically what is causing each component — which directly determines what treatment options are available to you. Call or text 410-816-9723 to schedule.
Treatment Options for Mixed Hearing Loss
Treating mixed hearing loss is more involved than treating a single type — but one component (the conductive part) is often partially or fully fixable. The approach is always: address the conductive component first, then manage the sensorineural component with hearing technology.
Step 1 — Treat the Conductive Component First
Fixing or reducing the conductive component improves how much sound reaches the inner ear, which makes everything else more effective. Depending on the cause:
Earwax Blockage
Reversible: yes — fully reversible.
Middle Ear Infection or Fluid
Reversible: usually yes — most resolve completely.
Perforated Eardrum
Reversible: often yes with treatment.
Otosclerosis
Reversible: yes — surgery is highly effective.
Cholesteatoma
Reversible: yes — once removed.
Step 2 — Manage the Sensorineural Component
The inner ear damage that makes up the sensorineural component does not repair itself. But it is highly manageable:
Hearing Aids
For most people with mixed hearing loss, a properly fitted hearing aid is the central tool for managing the sensorineural component. After treating the conductive issue, an audiologist uses the updated audiogram to program hearing aids that compensate precisely for the remaining inner ear loss.
Modern hearing aids for mixed hearing loss typically include:
- Custom programming for the specific frequencies affected by the inner ear damage
- Directional microphones that focus on the person speaking in front of you and reduce background noise
- Speech enhancement processing that improves the clarity of voices specifically
- Bluetooth connectivity to stream phone calls, TV, and music directly to the hearing aids
- Rechargeable options that eliminate the need for disposable batteries
An important note about hearing aids and mixed hearing loss: Hearing aids prescribed before treating the conductive component are programmed to the wrong baseline. Once the middle ear issue is resolved, your hearing improves — and hearing aids fitted for the pre-treatment level will be over-amplifying. Always address the conductive component first, then fit hearing aids to your updated results.
Bone-Anchored Hearing Systems
For patients whose conductive component cannot be surgically corrected, a bone-anchored hearing system may be an option. These devices transmit sound vibrations directly to the inner ear, completely bypassing the outer and middle ear.
Cochlear Implants
In cases where the sensorineural component is severe or profound and hearing aids provide insufficient benefit, a cochlear implant may be considered. At Hearing Assessment Center, LLC, we offer cochlear implant services and can discuss whether you might be a candidate at your evaluation.
Assistive Listening Devices
For specific situations — watching television, attending meetings, or talking on the phone — assistive listening devices (ALDs) can be used alongside hearing aids. These include TV streamers, remote microphones, and captioned telephones.
Ongoing Monitoring
Mixed hearing loss can change over time. Regular hearing evaluations ensure your hearing aids remain correctly programmed for your current level of hearing, and that any new changes are caught early.
Living With Mixed Hearing Loss — What to Expect
Getting a diagnosis of mixed hearing loss can feel overwhelming. Here is what most people find once they start treatment:
- Treating the conductive component often produces a noticeable improvement quite quickly — sometimes within days or weeks, depending on the cause
- Hearing aids typically require a two- to four-week adjustment period as your brain adapts to hearing sounds it has been missing
- Speech understanding in noisy environments often improves significantly once both components are being managed
- Many people report that their confidence in social situations improves significantly once their hearing is better supported
- Family members who understand what mixed hearing loss is are a valuable support — clear speech, facing you when talking, and not shouting all help enormously
The link between untreated hearing loss and cognitive health: Research has consistently shown that untreated hearing loss is associated with increased risk of cognitive decline, depression, and social isolation over time. This is not inevitable — it is a reason to treat hearing loss early rather than wait. Treating mixed hearing loss, even the component that cannot be fully reversed, significantly reduces this risk by keeping the brain engaged with sound.
Mixed Hearing Loss FAQs
The questions patients ask us most before their first appointment.