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Diagnostic and Rehabilitative Audiology

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Diagnostic and Rehabilitative Audiology Danielle Rose, Au.D. Clinical Audiologist Vanderbilt Bill Wilkerson Center – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Diagnostic and Rehabilitative Audiology


1
Diagnostic and Rehabilitative Audiology
  • Danielle Rose, Au.D.
  • Clinical Audiologist
  • Vanderbilt Bill Wilkerson Center

2
What the heck is an Audiologist?
  • Minimal credentials entry level currently the
    Au.D.
  • Roles
  • Identification and treatment of hearing loss
  • Assessment of balance disorders
  • Identification of need for additional medical
    referral
  • Rehabilitation hearing aids, cochlear implants,
    tinnitus
  • Intraoperative monitoring, neonatal hearing
    screening

3
Diagnostic Audiology
  • Diagnosing Hearing Loss
  • Managing screening programs
  • Routine outpatient audiometrics
  • Otoacoustic Emissions testing
  • Auditory evoked response testing
  • Immittance testing
  • Speech understanding testing

4
Diagnostic Audiology
  • Balance Function Testing
  • Vestibular system evaluation (ENG)
  • Rotary chair testing
  • Risk of falls evaluations
  • Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potential (VEMP)

5
Hearing Loss in Children
  • It is estimated that approximately 30 per 1000
    children have some degree of hearing loss (not
    including children with fluctuating hearing loss,
    high frequency hearing loss, and unilateral
    hearing loss) (Wayner, 2005)
  • 3 in 1000 infants are born with congenital,
    significant, permanent, bilateral hearing loss
  • 3 additional children in 1000 will acquire
    hearing loss in early childhood
  • NICU infants are at a higher risk for hearing
    loss, with at least 1 in 50 showing significant
    hearing loss (Northern and Downs, 2002)

6
  • 13 in 1000 children have unilateral hearing loss
  • 1/3 of children with a unilateral hearing loss
    have failed at least one grade during their
    school years and nearly 50 need special resource
    assistance (Bess and Tharpe, 1986)
  • 37 of children with minimal hearing loss have
    failed at least one grade (Bess et al., 1998)

7
Age of Identification
  • Until very recently, average age of
    identification of severe-to-profound HL has been
    2.5 yearsis now closer to 6 months in areas with
    newborn hearing screening
  • Inverse correlation between degree of HL and age
    of identification

8
Signs of Children With Minimal Hearing Loss
  • Inability to follow directions or answer simple
    questions
  • Inattentiveness
  • Confusion of similar-sounding words
  • Frequent requests for repetition
  • Fatigue/listening effort
  • Academic difficulties

9
Primary Causes of HL in Children
  • Genetics (accounts for gt ½ of congenital HL)
  • Infectious disease (pre-, peri-, or post-natal)
  • Low birth weight
  • Otitis media (middle ear infections)

10
Genetic Causes of Hearing Loss
  • Non-syndromic HL accounts for 70 of genetic
    deafness
  • 22 is dominantly inherited
  • 77 is recessively inherited

11
Infectious Disease
  • Can occur pre-, peri- or post-natally
  • STORCH Complex
  • Syphilis
  • Toxoplasmosis
  • Other
  • Rubella
  • Cytomegalovirus
  • Herpes Simplex

12
Hearing Loss and Otitis Media
  • The most common complication of otitis media (OM)
    is hearing loss
  • The majority of children will have at least one
    episode of OM before the age of 2 years
  • The average hearing loss resulting from OM with
    effusion is 25-26 dB in the speech frequency
    range (Gravel, 1999)

13
Hearing Assessment in Children
  • Birth to 6 months
  • Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR)
  • Otoacoustic Emissions Testing
  • Immittance Testing

14
  • 6 months to 2 years
  • Visual Reinforcement Audiometry (VRA)
  • Immittance Testing
  • Tympanometry
  • Acoustic reflex testing
  • Otoacoustic Emissions Testing

15
  • 2 to 4 years
  • Conditioned Play Audiometry (CPA)
  • Tangible Reinforcement Operant Conditioning
    Audiometry (TROCA)
  • Immittance Testing
  • Tympanometry
  • Acoustic reflex testing
  • Otoacoustic Emissions Testing

16
  • 5 years and older
  • Conventional pure tone audiometry
  • Immittance Testing
  • Tympanometry
  • Acoustic reflex testing
  • Otoacoustic Emissions Testing

17
Types of Hearing Loss
  • Conductive Middle Ear, Otosclerosis, Tympanic
    Membrane, Cerumen impaction
  • Sensory- Noise-induced, ototoxicity, genetic,
    presbycusis
  • Neural- Auditory Neuropathy, Tumors of the 8th
    cranial nerve, demylinating disorders
  • Sensorineural

18
Rehabilitative Audiology
  • Cochlear Implants
  • Candidacy evaluations
  • Initial stimulation
  • Mapping and remapping
  • Aural habilitation/rehabilitation

19
Rehabilitative Audiology
  • Hearing aids
  • Candidacy evaluation
  • Fitting
  • Follow-up
  • Re-evaluation

20
Needs of individuals with sensorineural hearing
loss
  • Better clarity for speech sounds
  • Understanding in background noise
  • Audibility for high-frequency sounds
  • Better understanding for female and childrens
    voices
  • Not necessarily volume

21
Sensorineural hearing loss
22
Goals in fitting of amplification
  1. Audibility
  2. Understanding
  3. Comfort for sound- sound quality
  4. Improved intelligibility in noise
  5. Physical comfort
  6. Ease of use
  7. Reduction in handicap

23
Hearing loss and the Physician
  • In-office screening-
  • Welcome to Medicare program (patient history,
    physical, hearing, risk of falls, depression,
    etc.)
  • More than 1/3 of individuals over the age of 65
    have appreciable hearing loss
  • Referrals for Medicare patients
  • Medical clearance for hearing aids
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