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Principles of Audiologic Evaluation SPA 5304 Audiology As a Profession • • • • • Huh? History Mission Whom do we work with? The Au.D. • Detection and Prevention of ____________ • Audiologic ____________________ • Audiologic ____________________ • Referral to: • Across the ______________ • With patients from various _______________ and _________________ _________________. Scope of Practice • Range of _____________________ • Where do you get these? • Specializations? Client? Patient? What do I call you? Does that affect what I think of you? How do I treat you? • • • • With R-E-S-P-E-C-T With Positive Regard With Congruence With Empathy First Impressions... • • • • • • Ambassadors of First Impressions? Eye Contact Handshake Honorifics Small Talk? Purpose of Visit Interview: • Open/Closed Questions • Neutral/Leading Questions • Feedback: – Honest? Hostile? Judging? – Probing? Reassuring? Understanding? – Silent? Nonverbal? • How we ask and how we respond sets up expectations on the part of the pt. Your Social Style: Are you a • Driver? • Analytic? • Amiable? • Expressive? Some Basics Sound, acoustically: vibratory motion of molecules propagated in a medium from a vibrating sound source. IMPEDANCE • The opposition to vibration, or • What, other than motion, happens to your applied force? • That is what do you have to overcome? Impedance has 3 components: • Resistance: Energy lost to heat through friction • Mass Reactance: Energy taken to overcome inertia • Stiffness Reactance: Energy taken to overcome restoring force Impedance and Frequency: • Resistance is generally the same across frequency • Reactance Components change with frequency Reactance and Frequency: • Mass reactance is greater at high frequencies --it’s harder to get massive objects to vibrate quickly • Stiffness reactance is greater at low frequencies --it’s harder to get stiff objects to vibrate slowly Resonant Freq. Mass and Stiffness Reactance 1.2 Reactance 1 0.8 0.6 Xm Xs 0.4 0.2 0 100 500 1000 Frequency 4000 At Resonant Frequency • Mass and Stiffness Reactance Cancel • Only opposition to vibration is Resistance • In Forced Vibration, you get the most vibratory amplitude for amount of force applied Threshold? • Absolute Threshold -- lowest value of stimulus which can be detected • Difference Threshold -- smallest detectable change in a stimulus The Auditory Response Area Decibels Sound Pressure Level • • • • dB SPL = 20 log (Pm/Pref) Reference Press. = 20 micropascals So, 0 dB SPL = level of a sound with 20 μPa of pressure Decibels Hearing Level (dB HL) • Referenced to average human thresholds in SPL Which depends on: • Frequency, and • Transducer SPL to HL Conversions Corresponds to height of curve DECIBELS A, B, and C scales Critical Bands: Fletcher A Basic View of Hearing & Hearing Loss • The Hearing Pathway can be divided into two major divisions: – CONDUCTIVE – SENSORINEURAL • Outer & Middle Ear = Conductive Mechanism • Inner Ear &Aud Nerv. Sys = Sensorineural Mech. Two Routes to Stimulate Hearing • AIR CONDUCTION: Uses both conductive and sensorineural mechanisms • BONE CONDUCTION: “Bypasses” conductive mechanism to stimulate sensorineural mechanism directly. Hearing Loss, A.C. and B.C. • Sensorineural Pathway is disordered: – HL is seen in both AC and BC • Conductive Pathway is disordered: – HL only via ? Bone Conduction-the Magic and the Myth MAGIC! • A bone conducted signal reaches both cochleae equally • No matter where you place it! Myth • Bone Conduction doesn’t use conductive mechanism • The truth is it actually does depend on the outer and middle ear to some extent. Tuning fork tests often use A.C. and B.C. • E.G., the Rinne, in which you compare hearing by AC to that by BC. • What should happen: • If there is a sensorineural hearing loss? • If there is a conductive loss? Tuning Fork Test #2:The Weber • Via BC at midline. • Can you hear this? If so, where? • Louder in RE?//Equal?//Louder in LE? • What should happen? T.F. Test # 3: The Bing • Comparing BC with the ear open/occluded • Any difference in loudness? • Yes ___________________________ • No_____________________________ Introduction to Audiometry. • Threshold is ARBITRARY: • Lindner study: people can percieve qualities of sounds they cannot "hear." Components of an Audiometer 1. BASIC: Oscillator Amplifier Attenuator Gate Transducer Generates tones Increases Level Controls Level Turns tone on/off Earphone/Speaker/ Bone Vibrator Level Control Switch Frequency Control Instructions: • Identify listening task – Listening for tones (mostly very soft) – Starting in which ear** • Identify response: – Onset – Offset • Encourage guessing • Ask if any questions Modified Hughson-Westlake • Ascending Procedure • Adaptive • Raising level in 5 dB steps – With each failure to respond • Reducing level in 10 dB steps – With each response to the signal THRESHOLD the lowest level at which responses occur in at least half of a series of ascending trials with a minimum of three responses required at a single level. THE AUDIOMETRIC FREQUENCIES • The octaves from 250 to 8000 Hz. Why? • Speech perception. • Inter-octaves (750, 1500, 3000, 6000 Hz) – required when thresholds at the adjacent octaves differ by 20 dB or more • Above 8000 Hz = “Ultra-audiometric” – Used in tracking ototoxicity ^ Severity of Hearing Impairment Hearing Level (dB HL) Classification -10 to 15 Normal 16 to 25 Slight 26 to 40 Mild 41 to 55 Moderate 56 to 70 Moderately Severe 71 to 90 Severe > 90 Profound Audiometric Configuration Flat < 5 dB avg. diff/octave Gradually Sloping 6 to 10 dB/octave Sharply Sloping 11-15 dB/octave Precipitously Sloping > 16 dB/octave Rising Better hrg in high freqs Trough > 20 dB poorer in mid freqs. Sharply poorer hrg at one freq. Notch