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Chapter 10 Case History, Integrating Audiometric Results, and Clinical Decision Analysis Case History _________________are often the first health professionals to evaluate patients who complain of hearing loss ____________ history plays a critical role in audiologic interpretation and decisions about the next step in the process Preliminary questions should be designed to discover the patient’s “___________ complaint.” The _____________examination should establish whether the outer ears are ___________________normal, the amount of ______________, and whether ___________________canals might be anticipated General questions before _________________ testing might include: Reason for visit? Which is the ___________ear? Onset of hearing loss, _________or sudden? Associated pain? Tinnitus? One Ear? Both ears? Previous diagnosis and treatment? ____________history of hearing loss? Dizziness and ____________? Questionnaires have proved valuable with certain complaints such as _________. The ____________course of the disease is often helpful in determining the type of problem the patient is experiencing. o Vertigo lasting seconds is more likely to reflect ____________ ______________ positional vertigo o Vertigo lasting minutes is consistent with _________ or vertebrobasilar insufficiency o Vertigo lasting hours suggests ___________ syndrome. o Vertigo lasting days raises the question of ______________neuritis or infarction of the _____________. The astute clinician combines the ____________ account of the patients’ symptoms with the conventional audiologic findings to determine the need for additional audiologic or ______________testing Recommending hearing aids or assistive listening devices are based in part on the patient’s description of _________________difficulties as well as test results. Even when the basic audiologic assessment fails to explain a given complaint, the history and further _____________should help to determine if further testing is warranted. Basic Audiologic Assessment The basic audiologic assessment is used to assess or monitor the status of the _____________auditory system (the outer, middle, and inner ears) The ____________ audiogram remains the foundation of the basic audiologic assessment The hearing-threshold test provides documentation of the degree of ___________loss, the slope of the ___________, and the ____________between ears as well as establishing a __________for other audiologic tests. The speech reception threshold may be used to validate the _______________thresholds as well as provide a baseline for suprathreshold speech tests. The monosyllabic-word-recognition scores provide insight into ____________auditory communication ability. A case history and audiometric results, along with the clinician’s ______________interaction with the patient, provide a clearer picture of the level of social functioning. Word-recognition scores have limited ____________value o Word-recognition tests are given to assess speech understanding o The suspicion of a retrocochlear hearing loss is strengthened if a score is ________% or less, but scores up to _________% do not preclude a retrocochlear site of lesion o Word-recognition scores do provide a valuable _______________ for assessing changes in an individual’s speech understanding with progressive hearing loss Bone-conduction measures are a good measure of ___________ear sensitivity preceding middle ear surgery. Upon completion of the basic audiologic assessment, the audiologist reviews the ________findings with patient A _____________referral may be warranted if the patient complains of ear pain or discomfort, ear drainage, conductive hearing loss, sudden hearing loss, rapidly progressive or fluctuating hearing loss, acute or chronic dizziness, or unexplained unilateral tinnitus. One measurement tool used by audiologists to assess the auditory nerve and central auditory nervous system to establish the site of auditory disorder is the ___________reflex. Case Illustrations Objective audiologic measures include auditory evoked ____________, evoked __________, and acoustic reflex Two Patients With Multiple Sclerosis (MS) In each of the cases of sudden unilateral hearing loss in patients with MS, the integration of ______________auditory tests helped to separate the site of dysfunction within the auditory system. A Cochlear Implant Candidate This case highlights the importance of the ___________history Clinical Decision Analysis and the Assessment of Cochlear Versus Retrocochlear Auditory Disorders The ABR has been shown to be the most sensitive of all auditory tests available in identifying ________nerve lesions o Factors other than eighth nerve lesions lead to ____________ABR findings o MRI-G is considered “the _________standard” for detection of eight nerve tumors (NIH, 1991). Background Measures of Test Performance Clinical Decision Analysis is a systematic approach to making clinical decisions under conditions of ______________. Disease Prevalence and Test Efficiency Prevalence is defined as the ___________of the test population that has the disease at the time of testing Test efficiency is defined as the ___________of being correct with a positive test result or the probability of being correct with a negative test result. Actual prevalence rates of eight nerve tumors have been estimated to be from less than _____% to more than ________%.