Hearing Assesment Flashcards
How do people with Conductive Hearing Loss hear sound?
Muffled, dull sounds (due to the physical blockage). They may have tinnitus.
How do people with Sensorineural Hearing Loss hear sound?
- Poor discrimination of frequency/speech
- Distortion
- Loudness imbalance (“sudden boom”)
- Some frequencies missing
- tinnitus strong correlation
What are the main causes of conductive hearing loss?
- Congenital Disorders: especially in the outer/middle ear but also in the inner
- Outer and middle ear infections
- Cholesteatoma: benign epithelial tumour
- Ossicular chain fixation: ‘arthritis’ when you get otosclerosis
- Trauma
- Tumours
What is a Cholesteatoma?
Cholesterol-containing-Granulation tissue that forms in the middle ear.
A perforation of the eardrum causes the skin to grow into the middle ear, can be really corrosive and destroy the middle ear → brain.
What is otosclerosis?
A cause of conductive hearing loss when abnormal bone growth around the stapes stops sound conduction to the cochlea
- *Treatment**: fracture the bone and use a bone-conducting hearing aid
- *Cause**: hormonal and genetic causes (higher in pregnancy)
What are the causes of sensorineural hearing loss?
- Congenital Disorders: causing total malformation of the ear, or genetic disorders of ion channels
- Inner Ear Infections: can cause labyrinthitis, which can cause fluid spaces of the inner ear to be filled with bone
- Ototoxic Drugs: ‘Commonly used meds that can cause hearing loss’
- Inner Ear Fluid Disturbaces; menieres disease
- Trauma
- Noise Exposure
- Age
Mostly sensorineural hearing loss is due to damage or loss of what?
Sensory-cells and nerve-fibres in the cochlea.
What is a Central Auditory Disorder and what causes it?
Disorders in processing sound in the brain; hyperacusis, tinnitus, amblyaudia (lazy ear) etc
Causes:
- Peripheral injury; lost connection with the CNS
- Developmental (synaptopathy, neuropathy)
- Neurological disorders
What different types of hearing assessments are there?
- Behaviour: sensitivity to sound, what the person hears (age/competentcy limit; can they respond to these tests?)
- Physiological: less limitations
- Functional imaging: increasing interest
Behavioural Tests (audiology) are what sorts of tests?
Audiometry:
- Pure Tone:
-pure tone air conduction or
- Pure tone vibrator on bone conduction (bypasses middle ear competely)
- Shows data in an audiogram, can show a ear-bone gap
- Speech Tests:
- Speech is best to use over pure tone as thats what we actually hear
How do we do a pure tone Audiogram?
Its to asses the pure-tone threshold to sound at specific frequencies.
- The sound level a person can hear at each frequency is recorded from 125-8000Hz
- The higher the sound level needs to be at each frequency the worse the hearing of the patient
- If it falls within the dark green area the person is considered to have ‘normal hearing’
What would the plot points of a high frequency hearing loss look like on an audiogram?
The points would drop into higher sound level thresholds at the higher frequencies
Whats the benefit of doing a vibrating bone-conduction audiogram with an air-conduction audiogram?
because with an air-conduction test the results could be due to the middle or the inner ear (eg the middle ear could be blocking sound to the inner).
Whereas the vibrating bone-conduction goes directly to the inner ear.
These help us differentiate where the hearing issue lies via the AIR-BONE GAP
What is the purpose of speech audiometry, and what is done?
Speech tests assesses comprehension and detection of speech.
- *Give a set of sentences and words to test in normal vs hard situations:**
- Speech detection thresholds and in background noise
- Make sure they are AGE appropriate
How do you do behavioural Audiology in children?
Much more complex and specialised.
Use visual and bodylanguage cues.
Can be done >4months