Hearing aid use linked to 23% lower dementia risk in people with both epilepsy and hearing loss
· Medical Xpressby European Academy of Neurology
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Adults with both epilepsy and hearing loss who use hearing aids may have a 23% lower risk of developing dementia than those who do not, according to new research presented at the European Academy of Neurology (EAN) Congress 2026.
Hearing loss is widely recognized as the largest modifiable risk factor for dementia. Yet whether hearing aids can reduce dementia risk remains debated. In particular, it is unclear whether any benefit may be greater in people with neurological, metabolic or cardiovascular conditions that place them at increased risk of developing dementia.
To explore this, researchers from University Hospital Zurich and the University of Liverpool analyzed electronic health records from more than 250 million patients in the TriNetX network. They compared adults with hearing loss who used hearing aids with closely matched adults who did not. The analysis included the overall hearing-loss population as well as people living with epilepsy, stroke, type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease, heart failure, migraine and osteoarthritis.
A signal limited to epilepsy
No significant association was found between hearing aid use and dementia risk in the overall population with hearing loss, nor among people with stroke, migraine, type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease, heart failure or osteoarthritis.
However, among adults with both epilepsy and hearing loss, hearing aid use was associated with a 23% lower risk of dementia. This corresponded to an absolute risk reduction of 2.7 percentage points over five years, equivalent to one fewer case of dementia for every 37 people using hearing aids. The association remained directionally consistent across all analyses.
Commenting on the findings, lead author Dr. Carolina Ferreira-Atuesta said, "What surprised us most was how specific the finding was to epilepsy. We expected to see a small benefit across several of the higher-risk groups we studied. Instead, most showed no significant association, while the association in epilepsy was observed consistently across all of our analyses. That consistency gives us greater confidence that this is a meaningful finding."
Cognitive reserve may explain it
The researchers believe the findings may be explained by differences in cognitive reserve—the brain's ability to continue functioning effectively despite age-related changes or damage caused by disease.
Ferreira-Atuesta explained, "Most people with hearing loss have enough cognitive reserve to absorb the extra effort caused by hearing impairment, so correcting it may not have a large effect on dementia risk. Epilepsy is different because cognitive reserve is often already reduced, meaning that removing one additional source of strain may have a greater impact."
"There are several biologically plausible reasons why we might see this effect in epilepsy. The condition is associated with accelerated cognitive decline, temporal lobe epilepsy affects areas of the brain involved in hearing, and some anti-seizure medications may worsen hearing," added Ferreira-Atuesta.
A practical case for screening
The findings have important implications for clinical practice, according to the researchers. Since people with epilepsy are already in regular contact with health care services, hearing assessments could be readily incorporated into routine care.
"Hearing loss is one of the few dementia risk factors we can actually do something about," said Ferreira-Atuesta. "It's easy to detect, and hearing aids are established, reversible and low-risk. This is a real call for increased awareness and screening. We have a vulnerable population, a problem that's straightforward to identify and a correction that's simple to deliver."
For people living with epilepsy and hearing loss, the researchers emphasized that the benefits of addressing hearing loss extend beyond any potential effect on dementia risk.
"If you have hearing loss, treat it," Ferreira-Atuesta urged. "The benefits for communication, mood and staying connected are real and well established, so there's every reason to act now."
Encouraging, but not yet proof
The researchers caution that the study was observational and cannot yet prove that hearing aids directly reduce dementia risk. However, the findings are encouraging and biologically plausible. Further prospective studies are needed to determine whether hearing aids can help protect long-term brain health in people with epilepsy and hearing loss.
Key medical concepts
EpilepsyDementiaHearing LossHearing AidsCognitive Reserve
Clinical categories
NeurologyHealthy agingCommon illnesses & Prevention Provided by European Academy of Neurology Who's behind this story?
Gaby Clark
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