Introduction: Who Should Seek Diagnostic Testing
If you notice changes in your hearing, it is important to seek medical attention promptly. Sensorineural hearing loss is the most common type of permanent hearing loss and accounts for the majority of all hearing difficulties people experience. Anyone experiencing symptoms such as muffled hearing, difficulty understanding conversations in noisy places, ringing in the ears, or the sense that others are mumbling should consider getting their hearing evaluated.[1]
Adults between the ages of 50 and 70 commonly develop this condition as part of the natural aging process, but sensorineural hearing loss can affect people of any age. Young adults exposed to loud music or noisy work environments, children born with hearing difficulties, and individuals who have experienced head injuries or certain infections may all develop this type of hearing loss. Even if your hearing seems fine, baseline hearing tests can help doctors track any future changes.[3]
Sudden hearing loss is a medical emergency. If you lose hearing rapidly—especially within 72 hours—you should seek immediate medical care. This sudden form, known as sudden sensorineural hearing loss, affects between 1 and 6 out of every 5,000 people each year. Quick treatment in these cases can sometimes help recover some or all of the lost hearing.[1][13]
Children should have their hearing tested if they did not pass newborn hearing screening, are not developing speech at the expected age, have frequent ear infections, or if parents suspect they are not responding normally to sounds. All children should have hearing screening before starting school, as early detection allows for timely support and intervention.[5]
Classic Diagnostic Methods
When you visit a healthcare provider with concerns about hearing loss, the evaluation process typically begins with a detailed review of your health history and the symptoms you are experiencing. The doctor will ask about your hearing difficulties, any family history of hearing loss, exposure to loud sounds at work or during leisure activities, medications you take, and any illnesses or injuries you have had. This background information helps identify potential causes and guides further testing.[11]
Physical Examination and Otoscopy
A physical examination of your ears is one of the first steps in diagnosing hearing loss. The healthcare provider uses an instrument called an otoscope, which is a special magnifying light, to look inside your ear canal and examine your eardrum. This visual inspection helps rule out simple problems like excessive earwax buildup, fluid in the middle ear, infections, or structural abnormalities that might be blocking sound. If the problem is found to be something like compacted wax or an ear infection, these can often be treated in the office, and hearing may improve quickly.[2][11]
During the examination, the doctor also looks for signs of damage to the ear canal or eardrum. Birth defects or unusual formations of the ear structures can sometimes contribute to hearing difficulties. However, when sensorineural hearing loss is suspected, the problem lies deeper—in the inner ear or the nerve pathways to the brain—and cannot be seen with an otoscope alone.[1]
Hearing Tests: Audiometry
The most important diagnostic tool for sensorineural hearing loss is a comprehensive hearing test called audiometry, which is performed by a specialist known as an audiologist. Audiometry measures how well you can hear different sounds at various volumes and pitches. You wear headphones, and sounds are played into one ear at a time. Your task is to indicate when you hear each tone, no matter how faint. This test, called pure tone audiometry, helps determine the softest sounds you can hear at different frequencies and identifies whether hearing loss is present in one or both ears.[11][16]
In addition to tone testing, the audiologist may perform a speech test. During this test, you listen to spoken words at different volumes and repeat them. This helps assess how well you understand speech and whether certain sounds, such as high-pitched consonants like “s” or “th,” are harder for you to distinguish. People with sensorineural hearing loss often find it easier to hear low-pitched voices, like men’s voices, but struggle with higher-pitched sounds, such as women’s and children’s voices.[2]
Tuning Fork Tests
Some doctors use simple tuning fork tests as part of the initial hearing evaluation. A tuning fork is a metal instrument shaped like a fork with two prongs. When struck, it vibrates and produces sound. The doctor places the vibrating tuning fork near your ear or against your skull to test how sound travels through air and bone. These tests can help distinguish between sensorineural hearing loss and conductive hearing loss, which occurs when sound is blocked in the outer or middle ear rather than in the inner ear or nerve.[1]
Tympanometry
Tympanometry is a test that measures how well your eardrum moves in response to changes in air pressure. A small probe is placed in your ear canal, and air pressure is gently varied. The test provides information about the flexibility of the eardrum and the tiny bones in the middle ear. While tympanometry is more useful for detecting conductive hearing problems, it helps doctors rule out middle ear issues and confirm that the hearing loss is sensorineural in nature.[5][11]
Otoacoustic Emissions Testing
Otoacoustic emissions (OAEs) testing checks the function of the hair cells inside the cochlea, the snail-shaped organ in your inner ear responsible for detecting sound. A small probe is placed in the ear canal, which sends sounds into the ear and measures the echo that bounces back from healthy hair cells. If the hair cells are damaged, the echo is weak or absent. This test is often used in newborn hearing screenings and can help pinpoint whether damage to the inner ear is the source of hearing loss.[5]
Auditory Brainstem Response Test
An auditory brainstem response (ABR) test measures how the hearing nerve and brain respond to sound. During this test, small electrodes are placed on your head, and sounds are played through earphones. The electrodes record the electrical activity in the hearing nerve and brain pathways as sound travels from the ear to the brain. This test is especially useful for infants, young children, or individuals who cannot participate in standard hearing tests. It also helps identify whether the problem is in the inner ear, the auditory nerve, or the brain itself.[5]
Imaging Tests
In some cases, especially when hearing loss occurs suddenly or in only one ear, imaging tests such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans may be recommended. An MRI uses powerful magnets and radio waves to create detailed pictures of the inside of your head. These images help doctors look for causes such as tumors on the hearing nerve (called acoustic neuromas or vestibular schwannomas), abnormalities in the inner ear structure, or signs of stroke or other brain conditions that might affect hearing.[11][16]
Other imaging tests, such as computed tomography (CT) scans, may be used to examine the bones of the inner ear and check for structural problems or fractures resulting from head trauma.[11]
Additional Blood and Laboratory Tests
When the cause of hearing loss is unclear, doctors may order blood tests to check for underlying medical conditions that can contribute to sensorineural hearing loss. These may include tests for diabetes, autoimmune diseases, infections such as meningitis or syphilis, or thyroid problems. Blood tests can also detect antibodies associated with autoimmune inner ear disease, a condition in which the body’s immune system mistakenly attacks the inner ear.[12][16]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
Clinical trials are research studies that test new treatments, devices, or approaches for managing sensorineural hearing loss. To participate in a clinical trial, patients typically need to meet specific criteria, which are determined through careful diagnostic testing. These qualification requirements help researchers ensure that participants have the type and severity of hearing loss being studied and that they do not have conditions that might interfere with the trial results.
Comprehensive Audiometric Evaluation
For most clinical trials studying sensorineural hearing loss, a detailed audiometric evaluation is essential. This includes pure tone audiometry to measure hearing thresholds at multiple frequencies in both ears, speech audiometry to assess word recognition ability, and sometimes tests of how well you hear in background noise. Trials often specify minimum or maximum levels of hearing loss for enrollment, such as moderate, severe, or profound hearing loss. These measurements help match participants to the intervention being tested.[11]
Otoacoustic Emissions and Auditory Brainstem Response
Many clinical trials require objective tests that do not rely on patient responses, such as otoacoustic emissions testing and auditory brainstem response testing. These tests confirm that hearing loss is due to inner ear damage rather than problems with sound conduction through the outer or middle ear. OAE testing specifically checks hair cell function, while ABR testing evaluates nerve pathways. Researchers use these tests to ensure participants have the type of sensorineural hearing loss that the trial is designed to address.[5][11]
Imaging Studies
Some clinical trials require imaging studies like MRI or CT scans as part of the qualification process. These scans help rule out conditions that might exclude someone from the trial, such as tumors, structural abnormalities, or other ear diseases. For instance, trials testing treatments for sudden sensorineural hearing loss may require an MRI to exclude acoustic neuroma or stroke as the cause. Imaging also provides baseline information about the structure of the inner ear and auditory nerve that can be compared to later scans during the trial.[11]
Medical History and Physical Examination
A thorough medical history and physical examination are standard requirements for clinical trial participation. Researchers need to understand the onset, duration, and progression of hearing loss, as well as any other health conditions, medications, or exposures that might influence the results. For example, trials studying treatments for noise-induced hearing loss may ask detailed questions about occupational and recreational noise exposure. Trials testing medications will review current and past drug use to avoid interactions or complications.[11]
Baseline Balance and Vestibular Testing
Because the inner ear controls both hearing and balance, some clinical trials include tests of vestibular (balance) function. These might include tests for dizziness, vertigo, or balance disorders such as Ménière’s disease. Baseline balance testing helps researchers monitor whether the treatment affects balance as well as hearing and ensures that participants do not have vestibular conditions that might complicate the study.[1][12]
Genetic Testing
In clinical trials focused on genetic causes of sensorineural hearing loss, participants may undergo genetic testing to identify specific mutations or genetic syndromes associated with hearing loss. This is especially common in trials involving children with congenital hearing loss. Genetic testing helps researchers understand which patients may benefit from gene therapies or other targeted treatments being studied.[3]
Exclusion Criteria
Clinical trials have exclusion criteria—conditions or factors that disqualify someone from participating. For hearing loss trials, these may include active ear infections, recent ear surgery, use of certain medications known to damage hearing, severe cognitive impairment, or other serious health problems. Diagnostic tests help confirm that potential participants meet all inclusion criteria and do not have any exclusion factors.[11]




