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Loud music can be hard on ears but can also damage your Lungs

November 13, 2014 10:52 PM

NO LOUD MUSIC PLEASE: Blasting music can be hard on the ears and the neighbours, and now researchers say that it can also pack enough punch to collapse lungs.Scientists suspect that loud music may damage the lungs due to its booming bass frequency, which can be felt as a vibration going through the body.

A small, partial collapse may resolve on its own, but more severe cases may require the insertion of a chest tube to allow the air to escape the chest cavity. Often, an underlying lung disease or chest injury is the culprit in pneumothorax. But so-called primary spontaneous pneumothorax happens in the absence of an underlying disease, typically striking tall, thin, male smokers.

The lungs may essentially start to vibrate in the same frequency as the bass, which could cause a lung to rupture. Reporting in the medical journal Thorax, they describe the cases of four young men who suffered a lung collapse - technically called pneumothorax - that appeared to be triggered by loud music, PTV News reported.

Three of the men were at a concert or club when the pneumothorax occurred, while the fourth was in his car, which was outfitted with a 1,000-watt bass box because he “liked to listen to loud music.” A pneumothorax occurs when a small rupture in one of the lungs allows air to leak into the space between the lungs and the chest wall, causing the lung to collapse. pneumothorax symptoms include breathlessness and chest pain on the affected side.

A small, partial collapse may resolve on its own, but more severe cases may require the insertion of a chest tube to allow the air to escape the chest cavity. Often, an underlying lung disease or chest injury is the culprit in pneumothorax. But so-called primary spontaneous pneumothorax happens in the absence of an underlying disease, typically striking tall, thin, male smokers.

The cases described in the Thorax report suggest that loud music may be one cause of this type of pneumothorax. Though the report cites only a small number of patients, lead author Dr Marc Noppen who is with the Academic Hospital in Brussels, Belgium says that he suspects more cases of music-induced pneumothorax will now be caught. In two of the cases his team describes, the men were standing close to large loudspeakers when they suddenly felt chest pain.

It’s probably a good idea, according to Noppen, to stand back from the speakers at concerts and clubs and to ease up on that car-stereo bass. It might also save your hearing, he said.

 

 

 

 

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