Monday, January 05, 2009

Golf clubs could damage your hearing

Golfers face going deaf from the "sonic boom" created when their clubs strike the ball, doctors have warned.

A report in the latest edition of the British Medical Journal claims that some players are at risk if they use a new generation of thin-faced titanium drivers that help propel the ball further.

The booming noise the metal club head makes when it strikes the ball was found by ear specialists to have reduced the hearing of a 55-year-old golfer. Subsequent tests of six titanium clubs against six thicker-faced stainless steel models found that the former all produced greater sound levels.



Dr Malcolm Buchanan, an ear, nose and throat specialist and one of the report's authors, said: "Our results show that thin-faced titanium drivers may produce sufficient sound to induce temporary or even permanent cochlear damage in susceptible individuals. Wearing earplugs is a possibility, although it may prove too radical for some."

The doctors, based at Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, conducted the tests after the 55-year-old attended their clinic with tinnitus and reduced hearing in his right ear.

He told them his titanium club sounded "like a gun going off" when it hit the ball and they could find no other explanation for his hearing loss.

You can read all about the science here.

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