How does earwax contribute to hearing loss?

Another cause of age-related hearing loss is that your ear canal can have more wax than a surf shop. As we age, ear wax simply gets drier and thicker. Designed to protect your eardrum, wax is supposed to help you by trapping dirt, dust, bugs, and friendly fingers before they reach your eardrum.

Wax also helps prevent infections. But too much of a wax buildup works as a roadblock in your ear canal. If the sound waves can't muscle past the wax and onto the drum, they can't start the vibration process that allows your brain to process those sounds, so you experience some hearing loss.

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