What is the differential diagnosis of auditory imbalance in the vestibule of the ear?

If an auditory imbalance in the vestibule of the ear occurs, it will stimulate the central system of the brain to affect the normal work of the pituitary gland. Under the influence of this anxiety, people will be very sensitive to all kinds of unsatisfactory things and produce resistance, so these unsatisfactory events will be infinitely magnified, eventually leading to the occurrence of depression and old age anxiety disorder. So, what is the differential diagnosis of aural vestibular imbalance? The following are the differential diagnosis methods for ear vestibular auditory imbalance. 1.Auditory fatigue When you walk into a strong noise environment, you will feel uncomfortable piercing your ears, and after stopping for a period of time, you will feel that your hearing becomes dull, and you cannot hear the slightest sound that you could hear, which is because your hearing threshold has shifted upward, thus causing your hearing to decline. But as long as you leave the noise environment to rest for a period of time, human hearing will gradually return to its original state, this phenomenon is called temporary hearing offset, also known as auditory fatigue. It is only a temporary physiological phenomenon, the auditory organs are not damaged. If one works under strong noise conditions for years and years, and the inner ear auditory organs are often stimulated by strong noise, this auditory fatigue will be fixed and will not return to normal, and a permanent hearing loss or hearing threshold shift will occur. This phenomenon is called noise-induced deafness. The person will be very sensitive to all kinds of things that are not as good as they should be and develop resistance. 2.Pathological auditory adaptation Auditory adaptation, short exposure time under strong noise, hearing threshold increase by 10dB or more, can be recovered by leaving the noise environment for a few minutes. 3.Hearing impairment Hearing impairment refers to congenital or acquired causes, resulting in structural defects of the auditory organs, or partial or total functional impairment, resulting in difficulty in hearing or recognizing sound; the identification criteria are as follows: (1) After receiving the self-conscious pure tone hearing examination, the euphonic speech frequency hearing reaches 25 dB or more. (2) Those who are unable to undergo the pure tone hearing examination in the preceding paragraph and are determined by other hearing examination.