This patient support community is for discussions relating to hearing loss, alerting devices, assistive listening devices, audiologically deaf, captioning, cochlear implants, culturally deaf, hearing aids, hearing dogs, home safety, Meniere’s disease, oral communication, safety, sign language, speech recognition, TDD, telephones, tinnitus, travel, and visual communication.
Audis are supposed to tell you to see a physician if:
1) Asymetrical hearing loss
2) Conductive Hearing loss
and there are many other reasons to send someone to an ENT, but those probably do not apply.
Honestly, just go see the doctor he/she will explain to you what is going on.
The increase is due to ageing process and also no aid was used. This is like prescription glasses not only help for reading, but also minimise chances of further recession.
I do not your age and your loss %, whether the aid is only hearing sound enlarging device or digital with speech fine tuning provision. Also whether u r a regular user and the working (sound) environment. These are some of the contributing factors for sound.
As for ur sinus, it can block ears. Wax in ear also contribute for ear loss.
You may preliminarily try steam inhalation - to get relieved from your blocked ears and clear wax, if any, without damaging the drum. It may help u partly. If still it will not improve your hearing, you better consult ENT doctor.
murphy58