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Oct. 6, 2009 -- Convertible lovers who take to the open road with the top down may be risking hearing damage, according to a new study out of the U.K.
"If you are exposed for long periods above 85 decibels [of sound], you have the potential for hearing loss," says Philip Michael, MD, an ear-nose-throat surgeon at Worcestershire Royal Hospital in Worcestershire, U.K., and the study's lead author. In his study, he found that the noise level with the top down was higher than 85 decibels. "The maximum noise was at 70 miles per hour and that was 89 decibels. It has the potential for causing long-term hearing loss.''
To put those decibel levels in context, a normal conversation is about 60 decibels; a rock concert is about 115 decibels.
Michael is slated to present the study -- which was funded by the Worcestershire Royal Hospital -- at the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery annual meeting in San Diego.
Previous research done by others about motorcyclists' noise exposure, coupled with his own love of convertibles, prompted the study, Michael tells WebMD. Motorcycle riders tend to wear earplugs, he finds.
But the topic of noise exposure to convertible drivers has not been studied much, he says. So Michael solicited convertible-driving friends who donated six cars. Another car -- a Morgan plus 4 Roadster -- was borrowed from the car company. Then Michael and his co-researchers measured the noise exposure to a single driver driving seven different convertibles at 50, 60, and 70 miles per hour.
The cars tested were:
"We measured the nose by the driver's ear,'' Michael says. Noise by the driver's right ear -- the roadside ear, in the U.K. -- was measured for one minute with a sound level meter as the cars were driven at 50, 60, and 70 mph with the windows lowered and the top down. They also measured the noise exposure with the windows raised but the top still down when the cars were driven at 70 miles per hour.
When driven at 70 mph, the noise averaged 89 decibels, Michael found, with not much difference among the cars, which ranged from moderately priced to extravagantly priced. ''The car price didn't matter," he says.
The size of the sample was too small to perform statistical analysis, Michael notes, but he did find a general trend toward increased, although minimal, noise exposure with speed.