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Calculated Shard: 105 (from laksa075)

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📍
LOCATION
Host 105 · Partition 68
laksa105
16911580909381593705
📄
INDEXABLE
CRAWLED
16 days ago
🤖
ROBOTS ALLOWED

Page Info Filters

FilterStatusConditionDetails
HTTP statusPASSdownload_http_code = 200HTTP 200
Age cutoffPASSdownload_stamp > now() - 6 MONTH0.5 months ago
History dropPASSisNull(history_drop_reason)No drop reason
Spam/banPASSfh_dont_index != 1 AND ml_spam_score = 0ml_spam_score=0
CanonicalPASSmeta_canonical IS NULL OR = '' OR = src_unparsedNot set

Page Details

PropertyValue
URLhttps://www.utmb.edu/mdnews/podcast/episode/ringing-in-young-ears
Last Crawled2026-05-18 13:23:34 (16 days ago)
First Indexed2024-03-23 00:30:38 (2 years ago)
HTTP Status Code200
Content
Meta TitleRinging in Young Ears
Meta Description<p>Have you ever heard a high pitched buzzing or ringing that only you could hear? I've had it happen on occasion, but some people experience it frequently. It's a condition called tinnitus, which peaks between ages 60 and 69 but can happen at any age.</p><p>In a recent study of 170 students, ages 11-17, over half reported experiencing tinnitus. That's an astoundingly high number and these students are at risk for developing hearing loss as young adults.</p><p>The adolescents in the study had their hearing tested using psychoacoustic examination. It measured their sensitivity to sound, loudness discomfort, and the intensity of their tinnitus. Nearly 30% experienced tinnitus during the test, heard it in both ears, and were more sensitive to loud sounds.</p><p>Among the 55% who self-reported tinnitus in the previous year, half experienced it after listening to loud music, 20% heard it at bedtime, and 22% sometimes heard it in silence. The tinnitus often affected their concentration and sleep.</p><p>Everyone in the study reported high-risk habits for hearing loss. They listened to music with headphones, and attended parties, clubs, and shows with loud music.</p><p>Surprisingly, the teens with tinnitus were less tolerant of loud music and attended fewer events with loud sounds, implying they're more vulnerable to sounds. It's possible there was already damage to auditory pathways that process sounds.</p><p>Tinnitus is when there's damage to hair cells in the inner ear that respond to vibrations caused by sound. Very loud noises can overload these cells causing temporary or permanent damage. If teenagers don't protect their ears, they could face a silent future.</p>
Meta Canonicalnull
Boilerpipe Text
heavy column, fetched on demand
Markdown
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Readable Markdown
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ML Classification
ML Categoriesnull
ML Page Typesnull
ML Intent Typesnull
Content Metadata
Languageen
Authornull
Publish Time2017-02-03 00:00:00 (9 years ago)
Original Publish Time2017-02-03 00:00:00 (9 years ago)
RepublishedNo
Word Count (Total)514
Word Count (Content)264
Links
External Links8
Internal Links26
Technical SEO
Meta NofollowNo
Meta NoarchiveNo
JS RenderedNo
Redirect Targetnull
Performance
Download Time (ms)373
TTFB (ms)275
Download Size (bytes)40,309
Location
Host ID105 (laksa105)
Partition ID68
Root Hash16911580909381593705
Unparsed URLedu,utmb!www,/mdnews/podcast/episode/ringing-in-young-ears s443