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Download ComD 3700 Basic Audiology Lesson 15 Inner Ear Disorders
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ComD 3700 Basic Audiology Lesson 15 Inner Ear Disorders Highlighted information refers to a change between the audio recording (using 10th edition) and the 11th edition of the textbook 1. COMD 3700 for Distance Education. This is lesson 15 on inner ear disorders. This lesson will cover pages 293-321 in Chapter 11 of your textbook. Again, the textbook is very effective in the teaching of hearing disorders. You can read from the chapters and gain a great deal of information. Therefore, there will be more reading for you to do and less listening for you to do in this lesson. I will briefly review some of the disorders. But the majority of the information will be gained from the chapter readings in your text. 2. Because most of you have taken an anatomy and physiology of hearing course, we will not be discussing details of the anatomy or development of the inner ear in this course. However, it is recommended that you to review pages 280-293 to ensure that you have a good understanding of the anatomy of the inner ear. 3. The inner ear consists of the oval window, round window, the cochlea and the superior, inferior and horizontal semicircular canals. 4. Conditions that affect the inner ear will result in a sensorineural hearing loss. SNHL is caused by damage or a disorder of the inner ear, or of the auditory nerve (nerve fibers) going from the inner ear to the brain stem. Older terms for SNHL were nerve loss or perceptive loss. Again, you should be able to recognize this on an audiogram. 5. Inner ear disorders may be organized into three orders or classes. They are: prenatal, perinatal and postnatal. They don't have to be, but this is the organization that many texts take and this is the organization we will pursue. Prenatal refers to something that is existing or occurring before birth. Perinatal causes of hearing loss are those that occur during the process of birth itself. Postnatal causes of hearing loss occur after birth. These can occur at any point in the lifespan. As we start this discussion on inner ear disorders, you have to understand there are a multitude of orders we're not going to address in this class. In fact, in the graduate curriculum in audiology there are a number of classes almost entirely dedicated to hearing disorders. So we're just scratching the surface, trying to give ourselves the opportunity to be exposed to some of the common disorders and the types of hearing losses that result. Unfortunately with inner ear disorders there isn’t any way to “see” what is happening. So these won’t be very exciting slides. But maybe some of you didn’t like seeing all the outer and middle ear disorders, so you may be relieved! 6. We will begin by reviewing some of the prenatal causes of hearing loss. Some prenatal causes are genetically related. There are multiple genetic disorders. You could spend an entire semester talking about genetic factors that cause hearing loss. At this time it is enough to say there are multiple genetic disorders and interactions with multiple causes and multiple effects. Many times these result in syndromes with their own characteristics. Rh incompatibility is a prenatal factor that can cause hearing loss. This is a factor more prevalent in the past than today because the way we can deal with and anticipate this. The problem with Rh incompatibility was the molecule known as the Rh factor was present in the fetal blood but absent in the maternal blood. This caused the mother's body to perceive the fetus as a foreign body and tend to build antibodies against the fetus. Antibodies begin to increase in the mother until red blood cells in the fetus were damaged prior to effective treatment for the Rh factor. Each successive pregnancy was more and more susceptible to the antibodies built up by the mother. With successive pregnancies, the antibodies became more and more effective. It's less of a problem today than in the past with maternal immunizations and fetal blood transfusions. An interesting fact you might want to know is that the Rh is because the research into the cause and treatment of this disorder was done with the Rhesus monkeys and so you have the Rh in Rhesus taken as the factor. 7. Another prenatal cause is acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) found in those with AIDS. Mothers with HIV have a 50% chance of delivering a baby with the disease. HIV can have an affect on the cochlea. Viral infections are also more likely to occur in a newborn if the mother suffered from a disease that causes deficiency in her immune system. A major cause of prenatal sensorineural hearing loss is cytomegalovirus, also known as CMV. This is a harmless virus that doesn't affect the mother to a great degree. It belongs to the herpes group. However, when the fetus is infected, a variety of physical difficulties can be present including sensorineural hearing loss. The fetus can be infected with CMV prenatally, perinatally or postnatally. 8. Now we will discuss perinatal causes of hearing loss. A common cause of damage is anoxia. This is the lack of oxygen during birth for the fetus. This can result in multiple physical and mental disorders including sensorineural hearing loss. Another perinatal cause is toxemia. This is an accumulation of toxic substances in the maternal blood. The toxic substances begin to accumulate and cross the placenta and cause damage to the fetus. Maternal toxic substances in the blood may reduce the passage of oxygen across the placenta and cause anoxia in the fetus. Prematurity of the baby is another perinatal cause of hearing loss. The preterm infant with an immature auditory system is at higher risk of auditory damage. Environmental noise, hypoxia, fluctuations in blood pressure, ototoxic drugs and neonatal infections are common problems in the NICU. The average incidence of hearing loss in the preterm infant population is 2% to 6%. This is a picture of my son who was born 2 months premature. In this picture he is 2 weeks old and weighs about 3.5 pounds. As you can see he was placed in an incubator. If any of you have been in a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, you may have noticed that it is a very noisy environment due to all of the machines to monitor the infants. In addition to the motor operating the incubators, there is constant beeping from the machines. So, prematurity itself can cause hearing loss, but the noise that premature infants are exposed to can also cause hearing loss. As you can imagine, as an audiologist, I was very relieved when my son passed his newborn hearing test. Unfortunately it was one of the last tests performed prior to leaving the hospital, so I had to wait 1 month before I found out he had normal hearing. 9. The rest of the disorders that we will discuss all occur postnatal, or after birth. Some occur in childhood, while others occur in adulthood. One cause, which occurs most often in childhood, is otitis media. When we discussed otitis media in the last lesson, I stated that it caused conductive hearing loss, which it does. However, if left untreated, the bacteria can travel from the middle ear to the inner ear and cause a mixed hearing loss. Sometimes it may cause total deafness, as in the case of bacterial meningitis. Other problems that occur after the child is born are diseases such as labyrinthitis and barotrauma. These are problems that can cause different types of hearing loss. With labyrinthitis, it usually causes a sensorineural disorder. Barotrauma can cause conductive hearing losses but can disturb the balance of fluids and pressures in the inner ear and cause sensorineural hearing loss as well. Ototoxic drugs or agents can be a problem. The mycin family is particularly suspect in terms of sensorineural hearing loss. Many of the mycin drugs are known to cause sensorineural hearing loss. However, not all mycin drugs cause sensorineural hearing loss. Your physician knows which mycin drugs will potentially toxic and which will not. So if you have a drug with the name mycin in the name, don't panic, but I would ask your physician or pharmacist to be assured that those drugs are not ototoxic. There are other specific drugs that are ototoxic, such as quinine drugs. These were mostly used in the past. But it did have ototoxic effects. Use of aspirin over long periods of time can be ototoxic. Nicotine has been shown to be ototoxic as well as a variety of other substances. All of these result in damage to the inner ear, and most always we're talking the cochlea. It could be other parts of the neural system, but mostly it's the cochlea. 10. A common postnatal cause of SNHL is noise. Noise exposure can cause a temporary hearing loss. This is known as a temporary threshold shift. You may have experienced this after shooting a gun or attending a concert. Noise exposure can also cause irreversible hearing losses. This is referred to as a permanent threshold shift. As a person moves through life, if they're constantly exposed to intense or loud noises, over a period of time, their pure tone audiogram, the threshold will show some hearing loss. In the initial stages, the hearing losses won't be seen the next day. But over time, that temporary shift in threshold will be seen as a permanent shift and the audiogram will not recover to normal. Noise induced hearing loss usually comes through long periods of exposure to intense sound. Noise induced hearing loss affects males more than females. This is not as true as it used to be. When males were out in the industrial world, they had more exposure to loud noises, so it would affect males more than females. With females more and more in the workplace, the difference between males and females has lessened somewhat. In addition, we are now seeing an increase in noise induced hearing loss in teenagers. A recent national study found that a stunning number of teens have lost a little bit of their hearing — nearly one in five — and the problem has increased substantially in recent years. This is very likely due to listening to loud music through the ear buds of digital music players (IPod, mp3 players). Some young people turn their digital players up to levels that would exceed federal workplace exposure limits. In the next slide I’ll review the safe amount of time to listen to your IPod. In another study of about 200 New York college students, more than half listened to music at 85 decibels or louder. That's about as loud as a hair dryer or a vacuum cleaner. With this type of hearing loss symptoms include: SNHL, tinnitus (ringing in the ears) and difficulty discriminating or understanding speech. Often times audiometric testing will reveal an increased hearing loss at 4000 Hz. This is known as a “noise notch”. This has to do with the location of the 4000 Hz region of the basilar membrane and the way the noise reacts in the cochlea. There is no treatment for noise induced hearing loss other than ear protection and avoiding loud noises. Once you have had years of being exposed to loud noises, you go through a permanent hearing threshold shift and you have then have a permanent hearing loss. Industrial audiologists work with companies to protect employees from intense noises. They can test the environment for the amount of noise present. This informs the employer, and they should require the employees to protect themselves from noise induced hearing loss. 11. As I mentioned, this is a table created based on research by Figor and Portnuff in 2006. This is a guide to the maximum iPod listening time per day. To be safe, no one should listen to the volume at louder than 50% of the possible volume. IPod’s have a volume control setting that can set the volume limit. Set the volume limit on your iPod to 50% in order to avoid hearing loss, regardless of how long you listen to it every day. 12. OSHA, the Occupation Safety and Health Administration, has recommended guidelines indicating how long an individual can be exposed to a certain level of noise. The maximum exposure is 85 dB of environmental noise, or noise in the work environment over an 8 hour day. As the level of noise increases, the amount of time that the employee can work in the environment decreases. So if the level of noise is 90 dB, they can only work in that environment for 4 hours. Every time the sound level increases 5 dB the time they can spend in the environment is cut in half. There are fines imposed on employers who allow their workers to remain in a loud environment longer than the guidelines allow. But there are no regulations to force people to limit their noise exposure during recreational activities. So many individuals with hobbies that involve motorboats, motorbikes, racecars, shooting guns, or music may also experience NIHL. 13. A cause of sudden unilateral (one ear) hearing loss is Meniere's disease. It is sometimes called endolymphatic hydrops because there's an excess of endolymph fluid. So you get abnormal pressure in the endolymphatic system. As pressure builds up in the cochlear duct, hair cells become affected. Hair cells begin to die, and they are damaged. This causes noise in the ear (tinnitus) and hearing loss. Also the vestibular mechanics will become involved. I’m referring to the vestibules and the semicircular canals. This causes vertigo (dizziness). This is a disorder of the entire inner ear, not just the cochlea. So, the infamous triad to identify Meniere’s disease is vertigo, fluctuating sensorineural hearing loss and a roaring tinnitus. In most patients with regular SNHL you will not see fluctuations. We see sensorineural hearing loss, but it usually gradually gets worse and it is not fluctuating. If this occurs where the hearing may improve for a few days or weeks and then get worse and then suddenly drop or improve again, this is associated with this Meniere's disease. Also, the tinnitus with Meniere’s disease is not a high-pitched ringing type but more a low-pitched roaring. This disease is named after Prosper Meniere, a French physician, who lived between 1799 and 1862. He called this disease a labyrinthine storm. I like this term a lot. It is kind of like a storm but then you add lightning and rain. Here, you have vertigo and fluctuating sensorineural hearing loss and tinnitus. It's a lot like a storm in the inner ear. 14. With Meniere's disease, the onset of symptoms are described as: fullness in the ear--but not like wax in the ear canal. There is the sensation of fullness, but it's caused in the cochlea; low frequency roaring tinnitus; hearing loss, great difficulty in speech discrimination--this is one of the great difficulties and violent vertigo. In half of the cases the onset of Meniere's is between 40-60 years of age. Meniere’s is characterized by attacks followed by periods of remission. So during a Meniere’s attack a patient will have roaring, dizziness, hearing loss. It can really affect them and they may have to take it easy for a while. Then after a period of hours, days, weeks, it subsides. They will have a period of remission that varies from days to weeks to years. 15. The diagnosis for Meniere’s is made by the combination of symptoms. As I mentioned, the patient will have a fluctuating unilateral sensorineural hearing loss. That's a unique condition. It's rare to have a flat, fluctuating, unilateral and sensorineural hearing loss. Usually hearing loss in sensorineural hearing loss is not flat, it's worse in the higher frequencies. One really distinguishing factor I've seen in my career is not only is the sensorineural hearing loss flat, but it seems more severe in the low frequencies than the mid or high frequencies. That's just the opposite of most other sensorineural hearing losses. The roaring tinnitus rather than the high pitches or clicking that others report is also rare. So if you have hearing loss and a dizzy patient at the same time, you're putting together a good argument for Meniere's disease. This is true especially if they have excessively poor speech discrimination. After testing, you look at the discrimination scores on the audiogram. For example, if you have a mild to moderate hearing loss, but the speech discrimination is 4050%. This is out of proportion with the hearing loss. So, along with the other symptoms you would begin to suspect Meniere’s disease. The treatment for this disease include diuretics. This is used as an attempt to lower the body fluids. One of the successful treatments for a person with moderate to severe Meniere's disease is shunting. The physician will enter the endolymphatic duct and put a small tube or shunt in there and take it to a part of the anatomy where the fluid can be absorbed. It has a little valve there, a valving mechanism. When the fluid builds up, it's shunted off the endolymphatic network and provides some relief. It may be recommended that they surgically getting rid of the labyrinth. It's a radical procedure. If the other treatments don't work and the patient is inflicted with terrible tinnitus that is so annoying the person can't sleep or function, an attempt might be made to sever the eighth nerve or destroy the labyrinth. Of course the person ends up with a profound hearing loss. This is a radical case and not done on a routine basis. 16. Presbycusis is the most common cause of hearing loss. This is hearing loss resulting from, or associated with, increasing age. It's usually due to the effect of infections, toxins and trauma throughout a person's lifetime. It usually progresses gradually due to changes in cell function, in the structure of cells, and the number of cells. All of this adds up to a progressive sensorineural hearing loss. This is an example of a typical audiogram you would expect to see due to presbycusis. The patient will hear better in the low frequencies and then gradually drop to a moderate to severe HL in the higher frequencies. 17. The aging process affects auditory areas other than the cochlea. The tympanic membrane, ossicular chain, cochlear windows, and the central auditory nervous system or higher auditory pathways are all affected by aging. Schuknecht in 1993 proposed four different categories for presbycusis. Number one, he talked about sensory presbycusis. This is focusing on the cochlea, on the hair cells, the sensory organs of hearing. As we get older, the hair cells and sensory organs become less sensitive in the hearing process. Then he talks about neural presbycusis. This is focused on the eighth nerve, the nerve pathway through the brainstem and on up into the cortex. As we get older, the neural system is less affective in passing on information. This applies to the hearing network also. Then he talks about strial presbycusis. The stria vascularis provides nutrients to different structures within the cochlea and within the inner ear system. Therefore, as we get older, there are fewer nutrients produced. The structures aren't as nourished and don't function as well. The last is cochlear conductive. Usually when we say conductive, our minds go to our middle ear. We're talking here about the movement of the structures in the cochlea, the movement of the basilar and Reissner’s membranes. Those structures, their mechanics are slowed through aging. They don't move as effectively as when we're younger. These four conditions contribute to presbycusis. They are all different, but overlapping causes. 18. So, just to review the characteristics of presbycusis, the person usually has a bilateral sensorineural hearing loss. Both ears age at the same time usually. There's an absence of auditory recruitment in pure presbycusis. There is also a gradual progress in bilateral sensory neural hearing loss. It gets worse and worse over time. Most patients with a SNHL find that a properly fit hearing instrument is their principal or sole means to improve hearing. Often, speech reading (lip-reading) and auditory training combine visual and auditory clues for a more successful fitting. This slide shows the various types of amplification. Hopefully you can see how they look in the ear as well as outside of the ear. Hearing instruments all have digital circuitry and many include additional features such as dual microphones and Bluetooth capabilities to help the patient in certain situations. 19. Here is a chart that is located in your textbook. Although we did not cover all of these causes of hearing loss, you should be familiar with them. You will need to be able to identify the age of onset as well as identifying information regarding the disorder. 20. In conclusion, I just want to say thank you for enduring to the end of this course. I know for many of you that are studying to become a SLP, this may not have been the most exciting course. Hopefully those of you who are interested in audiology haven’t changed your mind! This course can be difficult because it covers so many topics that are new and foreign to most of you. But I promise that once you are involved in audiology more and are able to work with patients, in becomes so much more exciting. Audiology is an evolving and growing profession that I hope some of you will consider. I know I’m glad I did! Thank you again for being a part of this course and I wish you the best in your future education.