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Unit Twelve Hearing Disorders in Children and Adults Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Chapter 46 Anatomy and Physiology of the Hearing Mechanism Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Outer Ear • Collects, resonates, and directs sound to the tympanic membrane • Protects middle ear • Three structures – Auricle, ear canal, tympanic membrane 3 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Tympanic Membrane • Thin, oval membrane • Separates ear canal from middle ear • Vibrates at the rate and magnitude of the sound waves that reach it • Seventeen times larger than oval window in the cochlea 4 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Middle Ear • Air-filled chamber • Extends from tympanic membrane to oval window • Contains the ossicular chain – Malleus, incus, and stapes 5 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Eustachian Tube • Leads from middle ear to nasopharynx • Keeps the middle ear at atmospheric air pressure • Typically opens with oral and swallowing movements 6 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Inner Ear • Cochlea • Vestibular system 7 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Cochlea • Contains sensory mechanism of hearing • Filled with fluid – Contains 13,000 outer hair cells and 3,500 inner hair cells – Hair cells attached to nerve fibers 8 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Cochlea • Motion of the fluid stimulates the hair cells – Send impulses to the auditory nerve (VIII) • Different hair cells are stimulated by different sound frequencies 9 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Vestibular Mechanism • Contains three semicircular canals • Responsible for maintaining balance • Interacts with the visual and proprioceptive systems 10 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Auditory Nervous System • Neural impulses from the cochlea – Sent to the auditory cortex in the temporal lobes • 75 percent of impulses from the right ear are transmitted to the left hemisphere – 25 percent ascend on the same side 11 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Chapter 47 Types and Causes of Hearing Impairment Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Hearing Impairments • Hearing sensitivity impairment – Reduction in sensitivity of hearing mechanism • Auditory nervous system impairment – Reduction in ability to hear sounds clearly above the hearing threshold 13 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Incidence • 28 million in the United States have some degree of hearing loss – 4.6 percent incidence for 18-44 years – 14 percent incidence for 45-64 years • I in 1000 infants has severe to profound hearing loss 14 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Hearing Sensitivity Impairments • Conductive loss – Due to disorder of outer or middle ear • Sensorineural loss – Due to disorder of cochlea • Mixed loss – Combination of conductive and sensorineural 15 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Hearing Loss and Outer Ear • Malformed or absent pinna • Malformed or absent ear canal • External otitis – Swimmer’s ear • Objects or excessive wax in canal • Perforation of tympanic membrane 16 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Hearing Loss and Middle Ear • Otitis media • Otosclerosis 17 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Otitis Media with Effusion • Inflammation and/or infection of mucous membrane lining middle ear • Treated with antibiotics • Surgery with PE tubes if otitis media is recurrent 18 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Otosclerosis • Ossification occurs in ossicles – Especially the stapes • Women affected twice as often as men 19 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Hearing Loss and Inner Ear • Largest cause of sensorineural impairments • Decreased hearing sensitivity • Difficulty understanding speech 20 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Noise-Induced Hearing Loss • Exposure to excessive sound results in change in threshold of hearing sensitivity • Can be temporary or permanent • Length of exposure is important 21 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Tinnitus • A noise sensation – Ringing, roaring, swishing • Heard in one or both ears • May be a sign of otosclerosis – Ménière's disease • Can affect concentration, sleep, social functioning 22 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Meniere’s Disease • Disease of inner ear characterized by: – Vertigo – Tinnitus – Sensorineural hearing loss 23 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Presbycusis • Progressive hearing loss as a result of aging • Difficulty understanding speech – Especially in background noise 24 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Communicative Disorders of Individuals with Hearing Loss • Variables that affect the type and degree of communication disorder include: – Age – Severity, configuration, and type of loss – Beginning of rehabilitation – Other handicaps 25 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Speech • Sounds that are not heard are difficult to develop – Final consonants, unstressed sounds • Stress, rate, breath control, pitch can be difficult 26 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Language • Form – Primarily content words, omit function words, telegraphic • Content – Weak vocabulary • Use – Difficulty with conversations, turn-taking 27 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Literacy • Average reading ad writing levels of deaf high schoolers are at 3rd or 4th grade level 28 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Multicultural Considerations • Across all ethnic and racial groups, three primary causes of hearing loss: – Prematurity – Heredity – Meningitis 29 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Chapter 48 Hearing Assessment Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Newborn Hearing Screening • Now routine procedure in many hospitals • Auditory brainstem response – Records electrical responses of the brain to sound • Otoacoustic emissions – Echoes that occur in response to sound 31 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Pediatricians and Family Practice • First professionals to see child with hearing problems • Conduct case history and interview • May perform several tests: – Weber’s test – Rinne test 32 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Audiologist Case History and Interview • Audiologist gathers information about: – Patient and family complaints – Is loss unilateral/bilateral? – Acute/chronic? – Duration of loss 33 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Pure-Tune Audiometry • Establish hearing threshold sensitivity across frequencies • Audiometers quantify hearing and can measure air and bone conduction 34 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Audiograms • Graphs that record pure tone hearing thresholds graphed by frequency (Hz) and hearing level (dB) • Conventional frequencies tested are 250, 500, 1500, 2000, 3000, 4000, 6000 and 8000 Hz. 35 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Audiograms • Indicate degree of loss and effects on communication • Indicate audiometric configuration: – Flat, downward, rising • Provide a measure of interaural symmetry 36 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Masking • When two sounds occur simultaneously and one sound is loud enough to cause the other sound to be inaudible 37 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Speech Audiometry • Measures thresholds for speech • Cross-check on pure tone audiometry • Quantify above threshold speech recognition 38 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Speech Audiometry • Determine range of comfortable to uncomfortable loudness • Recognition and discrimination of speech sounds 39 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Electroacoustic and Electrophysiologic Measures • Immitance audiometry – Measures how energy flows through outer and middle ear • Tympanometry – Measures middle ear compliance 40 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Electroacoustic and Electrophysiologic Measures • Electrocochleography – Measures electrical responses in the cochlea • Auditory evoked potential – Measures electrical activity in the brain 41 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Multicultural Considerations • Some auditory disorders are more common in certain racially and ethnically diverse populations – Genetic disorders – Otitis media – Presbycusis 42 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Chapter 49 Amplification and Aural Rehabilitation Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Amplification for Infants • Intervention should begin before 6 months • Team approach is required: – Audiologists, SLPs, social workers, special and regular educators, counselors 44 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Role of the Parents and Family • Fitting of hearing aids • Counseling • Encouragement for development of communication 45 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Hearing Aids • An ongoing process for appropriate fitting and gain • Parents need to be involved in care and daily use 46 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Components of Hearing Aids • Microphone • Amplifier • Receiver 47 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Styles of Hearing Aids • • • • Behind-the-ear In-the-ear In-the-canal Completely-in-the-canal 48 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Assistive Listening Devices • Amplification systems designed for specific listening situations: – Personal amplifier – Telephone amplifier – Personal FM system 49 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Other Assistive Devices • • • • Closed captions Vibratory pagers Vibrating and/or flashing alarm clocks Doorbell or smoke detector fitted with lights 50 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Cochlear Implants • Appropriate for clients with severe or profound bilateral hearing loss • Stimulate auditory nerve directly by applying electrical currents • Sounds are not like typical hearing so post-implant training is required 51 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Components of a Cochlear Implant • Internal – Receiver and electrode display • External – Microphone and amplifier 52 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Aural Rehabilitation • Minimizing and alleviating the communication difficulties associated with hearing loss 53 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Auditory Training • Develop ability to recognize speech using auditory signals • Appropriate for children with residual hearing • Amplification required before training begins 54 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Elements of Auditory Training • • • • Detection Discrimination Identification Comprehension 55 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Lip Reading • Using visual cues of speaker’s mouth and face to recognize speech • Factors that influence lip reading: – Visibility of sounds, rapidity of speech, coarticulation, visages, and homophones 56 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Goals for Speech Development • Increase vocalizations • Expand phonetic and phonemic repertoire • Increase speech intelligibility 57 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Therapy Goals in Language Development • • • • Use complex concepts and discourse Expand vocabulary Enhance syntax and pragmatics Develop narrative skills 58 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Sign Language • Visual means of communication using arm and hand shapes 59 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Multicultural Considerations • Little information on deaf cultures within other cultural groups • “Deaf” community is a genuine culture 60 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Chapter 50 Emotional and Social Effects of Hearing Disorders Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Stages of Life • Impact of hearing loss is affected by different stages of life 62 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Newborns • Families will proceed through the stages of grief: – Denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance • Stages do not follow a linear pattern 63 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Infants • Infant-parent bonding can be affected • Infant may be unresponsive to parental verbal play 64 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Childhood • Parents may struggle to cope with hearing loss • Children may have poorer self-concepts 65 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Adolescence • May have poorer peer relationships than hearing adolescents • Audiologists can help hard-of-hearing adolescents connect with one another 66 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Young Adult and Late Adulthood • Clients may feel the hearing loss has come “too soon” • May have to re-evaluate life expectations and goals • May feel they do not fit into any social group 67 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Old Age • Hearing loss can be made more handicapping by other conditions of old age – Vision loss – Physical impairments 68 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Emotional and Social Support • Parent support groups • Counseling • Assertiveness training 69 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved. Multicultural Considerations • Deaf culture views deafness as a difference – Not a pathology, disorder, or defect that needs treatment • Minority groups in the deaf world have a diversity of values and beliefs 70 Copyright © 2008 Delmar. All rights reserved.