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Kiss Of Deaf: L.I. Woman Loses Hearing From Smooch

4-Year-Old Daughter's Show Of Affection Turns Woman's Life Upside Down

Expert Says Sucking Action Damaged Ear Drum

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (CBS) ― Medical experts say a kiss on the ear by a 4-year-old girl has caused a unique chain of events that has severely damaged her mother's hearing.

And has CBS 2 HD has learned in this exclusive report, the unusual case has catapulted the family from Hicksville into the pages of medical history.

It was a kiss from a child. She is her mother's joy. It was an expression of unconditional love.

But for one Long Island mom, who we are not identifying because, of her concerns for her daughter's emotional scars, a big, suctioning squeaky smooch on her left ear from her then-4-year-old has left shocking permanent damage.

"It was a long sucking kiss in my ear. I couldn't push her away. I was almost frozen. When she stopped, and the kiss ended, I realized I had no hearing in that ear. Nothing," the mother told CBS 2 HD.

"I got very upset and yelled for my husband, 'I can't hear out of this ear! I can't hear!'"

Her daughter was devastated.

Abruptly the silence was followed by ringing, screeching noises. Days later, spasms and wind whooshing sounds. Finally, she couldn't even hear a dial tone.

"Until that time -- and I'd had it tested -- my hearing was perfect," the mother said.

Her medical doctors were mystified. After months, they referred the Hicksville homemaker to the "Guru of Hearing," Professor Levi Reiter, Chair of Audiology at Hofstra University.

Reiter says like a vacuum cleaner or plunger, the daughter's suctioning kiss two years ago had unintentionally pulled her mom's eardrum out toward the ear canal, detaching tiny ligaments and nerves.

Reiter is publishing his findings in the National Hearing Journal later this summer, predicting his patient may get better as years go by.

"I just have to give it time, but want everyone to know a kiss on the ear can be very dangerous," the mother said.

In investigating this, Reiter said he has found only one similar case, from the 1950s, but he thinks many others who are unaware, especially children, may have suffered hearing loss from a direct kiss into the ear.

Reiter is publishing his findings in the National Hearing Journal later this summer. He is also warning parents to avoid kissing into the ears of newborns.

(© MMVIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)


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