Having trouble following your favorite show? Missing details at work because you can’t hear in meetings? Hearing loss can leave you feeling left out. 

At Coastal Hearing Care in Lakewood Ranch and West Bradenton, FL, we’re committed to helping you restore your hearing starting with a hearing test.

A hearing test is an essential part of maintaining your overall hearing health. Using a variety of screening and diagnostic methods, a hearing test can accurately gauge the extent of an impairment as well as which audio frequencies are most likely to be affected. In doing so, hearing tests can effectively identify the earliest signs of hearing loss, often before noticeable symptoms have begun to manifest to individuals.

Even when no hearing loss is present, a hearing test can provide an invaluable baseline against which future declines may be more easily detected. Once diagnostics are complete, we can determine the best course of action, such as selecting and fitting the most suitable hearing aids if needed.

Why Choose a Doctor of Audiology for Your Hearing Test?

Not all hearing tests are created equal — and neither are the professionals who administer them. At Coastal Hearing Care, your hearing evaluation is conducted by a licensed audiologist with advanced clinical training, not simply a hearing aid salesperson. 

A Doctor of Audiology (Au.D.) holds a doctoral-level degree focused entirely on hearing science, diagnostics, and patient care. This matters for your hearing test in several important ways:

  • More complete testing — An audiologist can administer the full battery of diagnostic tools, including pure-tone audiometry, speech audiometry, tympanometry, acoustic reflexes, and otoacoustic emissions (OAEs). Each test reveals a different dimension of your hearing health that a basic screening would miss.
  • Accurate interpretation — Hearing test results require clinical judgment, not just data entry. An Au.D. can identify patterns in your audiogram that point to specific causes — such as noise-induced loss, middle ear dysfunction, or age-related changes — and recommend treatment accordingly.
  • No sales pressure — Our goal at your appointment is accurate diagnosis, not upselling. You’ll leave knowing exactly where your hearing stands and what, if anything, your next step should be.

Hearing Tests at Coastal Hearing Care, Lakewood Ranch and West Bradenton, FL

There are several different types of hearing tests available.

Audiometry:

Perhaps the most commonly known hearing test, this diagnostic involves using headphones to listen to sounds of varying tones and volumes. When you hear a sound in your left ear, you are instructed to raise your left hand, for example. A hearing specialist will track and mark the responses.

Tympanometry:

By gently pushing air into your ear, this test measures how well your eardrum moves and is an important hearing test for your middle ear. The results will show us if your eardrum is too stiff, has fluid behind it, or has a hole in it.

Speech Testing:

It’s one thing to hear tones. It’s another to hear well enough to discern speech. That’s why we’ll conduct a speech test where we ask you to repeat a pre-set list of words and phrases. This will reveal whether you’re hearing speech with clarity.

There are several other types of tests available, each dedicated to revealing a certain aspect of your hearing health. We’ll examine your overall symptoms and determine which hearing tests best meet your needs. Call us at 941-344-3575 or 941-344-2761 to schedule an appointment.

What Happens During a Hearing Test?

Most hearing tests are conducted in a quiet room. You’ll be given a pair of headphones to listen to sounds, speech, or tones while a hearing specialist observes and notes your responses.

It’s common to undergo multiple diagnostics during your hearing test, as each screening is designed to evaluate a different type of hearing loss. Once all diagnostic tests have been completed, we’ll evaluate your results.

Young girl in a hearing booth having her hearing tested.

What Does a Hearing Test Show?

Hearing tests, such as audiometry, are designed to provide hearing specialists with enough information to determine the cause, type, and extent of hearing loss. Generally, hearing test results will be shown via a specialized graph called an audiogram. An audiogram is a graph with two axes: sound level (in dB) and tone.  

Your hearing range will be diagrammed out on this graph. Usually, there will be several data points–one for each tone tested, plotted at the edge of your hearing range. As a result, an audiogram will show:

audio frequencies

What frequencies you hear well and which frequencies you have a harder time hearing.

clipboard

The extent and severity of any hearing loss that may be present.

Usually, early hearing loss will affect one frequency more extensively than others. It’s not uncommon, then, to have dips in one area of an audiogram.

What Is the Normal Hearing Range?

The higher your data points appear on an audiogram, the closer you are to a normal hearing range. In general, a normal hearing range is considered to be the ability to hear sounds that are less than 25dB in volume–a sound level roughly equivalent to rustling leaves or whispered words. In general, we use the following categories to define normal hearing and hearing loss:

  • Normal hearing:
    The ability to hear sounds 25dB and below.
  • Mild hearing loss:
    Sounds between 25dB and 40dB are audible, but not softer sounds.
  • Moderate hearing loss:
    Sounds below 41dB-65dB are difficult for you to hear.
  • Severe hearing loss:
    Sounds below 66-90dB are hard to hear.
  • Profound hearing loss:
    Sounds need to be louder than 90dB for you to be able to hear them. That’s roughly as loud as a lawnmower.

Typically, hearing loss does not occur evenly across all frequencies. Simply because your hearing is “normal” at some frequencies does not mean your hearing will be healthy in totality. It’s common to experience severe hearing loss when it comes to high frequencies, for example, but have normal hearing levels across the rest of the audio spectrum.

Hearing Loss and Your Long-Term Health: Why Earlier Testing Matters

A hearing test isn’t just about how well you can follow a conversation. Research increasingly shows that untreated hearing loss is connected to several serious health conditions — many of which are highly relevant to adults in Lakewood Ranch and the Bradenton area.

Hearing Loss and Cognitive Decline Studies have found that adults with untreated hearing loss experience cognitive decline at a faster rate than those with healthy hearing. The leading theory is that when the brain works harder to process degraded sound, fewer cognitive resources are available for memory and thinking. Addressing hearing loss early — before it becomes severe — is now considered a meaningful step in protecting long-term brain health.

Hearing Loss and Balance The inner ear doesn’t just process sound; it also plays a central role in your balance system. Many patients who come to us for hearing tests are also experiencing unexplained dizziness or instability. Because hearing and vestibular function are closely connected, a thorough hearing evaluation can be the first step in identifying balance issues before they lead to falls or injuries.

Hearing Loss and Social Health Struggling to follow conversations — in restaurants, at family gatherings, in group settings — leads many people to withdraw socially. Social isolation is itself a documented risk factor for depression and accelerated cognitive decline. A hearing test can identify whether hearing loss is quietly affecting your quality of life in ways you may have attributed to other causes.

The case for baseline testing. Even if you haven’t noticed any symptoms, getting a hearing test establishes a documented baseline. If your hearing changes in the future, that baseline makes it easier to detect — and respond to — meaningful decline early.

Schedule your hearing evaluation at Coastal Hearing Care in Lakewood Ranch or West Bradenton today. Call or Text Us. 

The Value of a Hearing Test

Whether your hearing is waning or you haven’t noticed any issues, a hearing test is an essential part of your hearing health. If your hearing is fantastic, screenings can provide peace of mind and a benchmark for future tests. And if you have tinnitus or hearing loss, a hearing test can provide a roadmap to the best possible treatment plan.