Dancing is Good for Your Brain

Did you know that, much like how wearing hearing aids may help prevent cognitive decline, dancing can too? Put them together, and you’ve got an excuse for a fun night out anytime!

Untreated hearing loss and dementia

Untreated hearing loss is a risk factor for dementia2, because as the brain stops hearing certain sound frequencies, it forgets how to hear them. You don’t hear with your ears – you hear with your brain.

The neural pathways that are made for specific sounds and frequencies start to degrade and eventually disappear when you can no longer hear them, and that part of your brain isn’t working anymore. It’s believed that the more unused brain areas you have, the more risk for dementia.

How does dancing help?

Freestyle dancing3 – any type where you hear music and improvise the steps you do – helps create new neural pathways in your brain. The more you dance, the better for your brain!

Plus, dancing is fun and listening to music with hearing aids in means your brain is getting the full experience of sound, too. Give Regional Hearing and Balance Center a call if you need a tune-up for your hearing aids or a new hearing aid program for listening to music (and dancing).

And remember – dancing is good for your brain, even if you close all the curtains and dance by yourself at home!

Need Help? Have a Question? Contact Us Today!

If you’d like to discuss more about how treating a hearing loss can improve your quality of life, please get in touch with the team at Regional Hearing and Balance Center today. Call us at 208-497-3596 or click here to book a complimentary hearing assessment.

© 2024 Regional Hearing and Balance. All right reserved. | Privacy Policy

The purpose of this hearing assessment and/or demonstration is for hearing wellness and to determine if the consumer may benefit from using hearing aids, which may include selling and fitting hearing aids. Products demonstrated may differ from products sold. Assessment conclusion is not a medical diagnosis and further testing may be required to diagnose hearing loss. The use of any hearing aid may not fully restore normal hearing and does not prevent future hearing loss. Hearing instruments may not meet the needs of all hearing-impaired individuals.