957 resultados para pure tone audiometry


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Mestrado em Segurança e Higiene no Trabalho

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The aim of the present study was to characterize the discharge properties of single neurons in the dorsal nucleus of the lateral lemniscus (DNLL) of the rat. In the absence of acoustic stimulation, two types of spontaneous discharge patterns were observed: units tended to fire in a bursting or in a nonbursting mode. The distribution of units in the DNLL based on spontaneous firing rate followed a rostrocaudal gradient: units with high spontaneous rates were most commonly located in the rostral part of the DNLL, whereas in the caudal part units had lower spontaneous discharge rates. The most common response pattern of DNLL units to 200 ms binaural noise bursts contained a prominent onset response followed by a lower but steady-state response and an inhibitory response in the early-off period. Thresholds of response to noise bursts were on average higher for DNLL units than for units recorded in the inferior colliculus under the same experimental conditions. The DNLL units were arranged according to a mediolateral sensitivity gradient with the lowest threshold units in the most lateral part of the nucleus. In the rat, as in other mammals, the most common DNLL binaural input type was an excitatory response to contralateral ear stimulation and inhibitory response to ipsilateral ear stimulation (EI type). Pure tone bursts were in general a more effective stimulus compared to noise bursts. Best frequency (BF) was established for 97 DNLL units and plotted according to their spatial location. The DNLL exhibits a loose tonotopic organization, where there is a concentric pattern with high BF units located in the most dorsal and ventral parts of the DNLL and lower BF units in the middle part of the nucleus.

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Top-down contextual influences play a major part in speech understanding, especially in hearing-impaired patients with deteriorated auditory input. Those influences are most obvious in difficult listening situations, such as listening to sentences in noise but can also be observed at the word level under more favorable conditions, as in one of the most commonly used tasks in audiology, i.e., repeating isolated words in silence. This study aimed to explore the role of top-down contextual influences and their dependence on lexical factors and patient-specific factors using standard clinical linguistic material. Spondaic word perception was tested in 160 hearing-impaired patients aged 23-88 years with a four-frequency average pure-tone threshold ranging from 21 to 88 dB HL. Sixty spondaic words were randomly presented at a level adjusted to correspond to a speech perception score ranging between 40 and 70% of the performance intensity function obtained using monosyllabic words. Phoneme and whole-word recognition scores were used to calculate two context-influence indices (the j factor and the ratio of word scores to phonemic scores) and were correlated with linguistic factors, such as the phonological neighborhood density and several indices of word occurrence frequencies. Contextual influence was greater for spondaic words than in similar studies using monosyllabic words, with an overall j factor of 2.07 (SD = 0.5). For both indices, context use decreased with increasing hearing loss once the average hearing loss exceeded 55 dB HL. In right-handed patients, significantly greater context influence was observed for words presented in the right ears than for words presented in the left, especially in patients with many years of education. The correlations between raw word scores (and context influence indices) and word occurrence frequencies showed a significant age-dependent effect, with a stronger correlation between perception scores and word occurrence frequencies when the occurrence frequencies were based on the years corresponding to the patients' youth, showing a "historic" word frequency effect. This effect was still observed for patients with few years of formal education, but recent occurrence frequencies based on current word exposure had a stronger influence for those patients, especially for younger ones.

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La perception est décrite comme l’ensemble des processus permettant au cerveau de recueillir et de traiter l’information sensorielle. Un traitement perceptif atypique se retrouve souvent associé au phénotype autistique habituellement décrit en termes de déficits des habilités sociales et de communication ainsi que par des comportements stéréotypés et intérêts restreints. Les particularités perceptives des autistes se manifestent à différents niveaux de traitement de l’information; les autistes obtiennent des performances supérieures à celles des non autistes pour discriminer des stimuli simples, comme des sons purs, ou encore pour des tâches de plus haut niveau comme la détection de formes enchevêtrées dans une figure complexe. Spécifiquement pour le traitement perceptif de bas niveau, on rapporte une dissociation de performance en vision. En effet, les autistes obtiennent des performances supérieures pour discriminer les stimuli définis par la luminance et inférieures pour les stimuli définis par la texture en comparaison à des non autistes. Ce pattern dichotomique a mené à l’élaboration d’une hypothèse suggérant que l’étendue (ou complexité) du réseau de régions corticales impliquées dans le traitement des stimuli pourrait sous-tendre ces différences comportementales. En effet, les autistes obtiennent des performances supérieures pour traiter les stimuli visuels entièrement décodés au niveau d’une seule région corticale (simples) et inférieures pour les stimuli dont l’analyse requiert l’implication de plusieurs régions corticales (complexes). Un traitement perceptif atypique représente une caractéristique générale associée au phénotype autistique, avec de particularités rapportées tant dans la modalité visuelle qu’auditive. Étant donné les parallèles entre ces deux modalités sensorielles, cette thèse vise à vérifier si l’hypothèse proposée pour expliquer certaines particularités du traitement de l’information visuelle peut possiblement aussi caractériser le traitement de l’information auditive dans l’autisme. Le premier article (Chapitre 2) expose le niveau de performance des autistes, parfois supérieur, parfois inférieur à celui des non autistes lors du traitement de l’information auditive et suggère que la complexité du matériel auditif à traiter pourrait être en lien avec certaines des différences observées. Le deuxième article (Chapitre 3) présente une méta-analyse quantitative investiguant la représentation au niveau cortical de la complexité acoustique chez les non autistes. Ce travail confirme l’organisation fonctionnelle hiérarchique du cortex auditif et permet d’identifier, comme en vision, des stimuli auditifs pouvant être définis comme simples et complexes selon l’étendue du réseau de régions corticales requises pour les traiter. Le troisième article (Chapitre 4) vérifie l’extension des prédictions de l’hypothèse proposée en vision au traitement de l’information auditive. Spécifiquement, ce projet compare les activations cérébrales sous-tendant le traitement des sons simples et complexes chez des autistes et des non autistes. Tel qu’attendu, les autistes montrent un patron d’activité atypique en réponse aux stimuli complexes, c’est-à-dire ceux dont le traitement nécessitent l’implication de plusieurs régions corticales. En bref, l’ensemble des résultats suggèrent que les prédictions de l’hypothèse formulée en vision peuvent aussi s’appliquer en audition et possiblement expliquer certaines particularités du traitement de l’information auditive dans l’autisme. Ce travail met en lumière des différences fondamentales du traitement perceptif contribuant à une meilleure compréhension des mécanismes d’acquisition de l’information dans cette population.

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Le diagnostic de l’acouphène repose sur le rapport verbal du patient. Cependant, les paramètres psychoacoustiques, tels que la hauteur et la sonie de l’acouphène, sont essentiels pour l’évaluation et pour discriminer les fausses plaintes. Quantifier le percept de l’acouphène reste un objectif de recherche important. Nous avons cherché à: (1) évaluer la précision d'une nouvelle méthode d'évaluation des acouphènes du type « likeness rating » avec une méthode de présentation continue de la hauteur, en considérant la formation musicale, et (2) vérifier si les mesures psychoacoustiques de l’acouphène ont la sensibilité et la spécificité pour détecter les personnes simulant un acouphène. Nous avons recruté des musiciens et des non-musiciens souffrant d'acouphènes et des simulateurs sans acouphènes. La plupart d’entre eux ont été testés une seconde fois quelques semaines plus tard. La hauteur de l’acouphène a d’abord été évaluée en utilisant la méthode « likness rating ». Des sons purs ont été présentés de manière aléatoire de 0.25 kHz à 16 kHz et les participants devaient coter la ressemblance de chaque son par rapport à leur acouphène, et en ajuster son volume de 0 à 100 dB SPL. La hauteur a ensuite été évaluée par une méthode, où les participants devaient apparier la hauteur de leur acouphène en déplaçant leur doigt sur une bande tactile générant des sons purs en continu de 0.5 kHz à 20 kHz par pas de 1 Hz. Les capacités à apparier des sons externes ont été évaluées en utilisant cet appareil. La hauteur prédominante de l’acouphène était similaire entre les deux méthodes pour les musiciens et les non-musiciens, bien que les musiciens montraient de meilleures capacités d’appariement face à des sons externes. Les simulateurs ont coté la sonie bien au-dessus que les autres groupes avec un grand degré de spécificité (94,4%), et ont été inconsistants dans l’appariement de cette sonie (pas de la hauteur) d’une session à une autre. Les données de la seconde session montrent des réponses similaires pour l’appariement de la hauteur pour les deux méthodes ainsi que pour tous nos participants. En conclusion, la hauteur et la sonie correspondent au percept de l’acouphène et doivent en plus être utilisées avec des échelles visuelles analogiques, qui sont plus corrélées avec la gêne et la détresse. Enfin, l’appariement de la sonie est sensible et spécifique à déterminer la présence de l’acouphène.

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Objective: This work investigates the nature of the comprehension impairment in Wernicke’s aphasia, by examining the relationship between deficits in auditory processing of fundamental, non-verbal acoustic stimuli and auditory comprehension. Wernicke’s aphasia, a condition resulting in severely disrupted auditory comprehension, primarily occurs following a cerebrovascular accident (CVA) to the left temporo-parietal cortex. Whilst damage to posterior superior temporal areas is associated with auditory linguistic comprehension impairments, functional imaging indicates that these areas may not be specific to speech processing but part of a network for generic auditory analysis. Methods: We examined analysis of basic acoustic stimuli in Wernicke’s aphasia participants (n = 10) using auditory stimuli reflective of theories of cortical auditory processing and of speech cues. Auditory spectral, temporal and spectro-temporal analysis was assessed using pure tone frequency discrimination, frequency modulation (FM) detection and the detection of dynamic modulation (DM) in “moving ripple” stimuli. All tasks used criterion-free, adaptive measures of threshold to ensure reliable results at the individual level. Results: Participants with Wernicke’s aphasia showed normal frequency discrimination but significant impairments in FM and DM detection, relative to age- and hearing-matched controls at the group level (n = 10). At the individual level, there was considerable variation in performance, and thresholds for both frequency and dynamic modulation detection correlated significantly with auditory comprehension abilities in the Wernicke’s aphasia participants. Conclusion: These results demonstrate the co-occurrence of a deficit in fundamental auditory processing of temporal and spectrotemporal nonverbal stimuli in Wernicke’s aphasia, which may have a causal contribution to the auditory language comprehension impairment Results are discussed in the context of traditional neuropsychology and current models of cortical auditory processing.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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O audiograma ou o relato do paciente não é suficiente para determinar a presença ou não de zonas mortas na cóclea (ZMC), nem identificar sua extensão. OBJETIVO: Investigar, utilizando o teste TEN, ZMC de indivíduos com perda auditiva neurossensorial (PANS). CEDALVI/ HRAC-USP-Bauru, de agosto de 2003 a fevereiro de 2004. TIPO DE ESTUDO: Estudo de coorte contemporânea com corte transversal. Casuística e Métodos: O TEN foi aplicado nos grupos G1 (5 mulheres com limiares tonais aéreos dentro do padrão de normalidade); G2 (4 mulheres e 5 homens com PANS moderada plana); G3 (19 mulheres e 24 homens com PANS com o grau variando entre leve a profundo). RESULTADOS: Para G1, o valor de TEN para eliminar o tom de teste foi, em média, próximo ao limiar absoluto para todas as freqüências. Não foi observada ZMC em nenhuma das orelhas testadas do G2. Para as 76 orelhas do G3, 6 não apresentaram indício de ZM. CONCLUSÕES: O TEN é efetivo para indicar ZMC em indivíduos com PANS descendente. Há evidência de diferença na detecção do tom puro na presença de ruído entre indivíduos com PANS em altas freqüências e com PANS plana, pois se observou diferença significativa entre o limiar mascarado e absoluto apenas para PANS descendentes e não para as planas.

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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)

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The auditory brainstem implant (ABI) was first developed to help neurofibromatosis type 2 patients. Recently, its use has been recently extended to adults with non-tumor etiologies and children with profound hearing loss who were not candidates for a cochlear implant (Cl). Although the results has been extensively reported, the stimulation parameters involved behind the outcomes have received less attention. Objective: The aim of this study is to describe the audiologic outcomes and the MAP parameters in ABI adults and children at our center. Methods: Retrospective chart review. Five adults and four children were implanted with the ABI24M from September 2005 to June 2009. In the adult patients, four had Neurofibromatosis type 2, and one had postmeningitic deafness with complete ossification of both cochleae. Three of the children had cochlear malformation or dysplasia, and one had complete ossified cochlea due to meningitis. Map parameters as well as the intraoperative electrical auditory brainstem responses were collected. Evaluation was performed with at least six months of device use and included free-field hearing thresholds, speech perception tests in the adult patients and for the children, the Infant-Toddler Meaningful Auditory Integration Scale (IT-MAIS) and (ESP) were used to evaluate the development of auditory skills, besides the MUSS to evaluate. Results: The number of active electrodes that did not cause any non-auditory sensation varied from three to nineteen. All of them were programmed with SPEAK strategy, and the pulse widths varied from 100 to 300 mu s. Free-field thresholds with warble tones varied from very soft auditory sensation of 70 dBHL at 250 Hz to a pure tone average of 45 dBHL. Speech perception varied from none to 60% open-set recognition of sentences in silence in the adult population and from no auditory sensation at all to a slight improvement in the IT-MAIS/MAIS scores. Conclusion: We observed that ABI may be a good option for offering some hearing attention to both adults and children. In children, the results might not be enough to ensure oral language development. Programming the speech processor in children demands higher care to the audiologist. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Severe Ménière's disease (MD) may be debilitating and compromising, despite intensive medical treatment. Vestibular neurectomy (VN) is considered an effective surgical treatment for disabling MD. Our aim was to analyse the medium- to long-term outcome after retrosigmoid VN with special regard to vertigo, quality of life (American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery criteria), and pure tone average (PTA).

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In this prospective multicenter study, tinnitus loudness and tinnitus-related distress were investigated in 174 cochlear implant (CI) candidates who underwent CI surgery at a Swiss cochlear implant center. All subjects participated in two session, one preoperatively and one 6 months after device activation. In both sessions, tinnitus loudness was assessed using a visual analogue scale and tinnitus distress using a standardized tinnitus questionnaire. The data were compared with unaided pre- and postoperative pure tone thresholds, and postoperative speech reception scores. 71.8% of the subjects reported tinnitus preoperatively. Six months after CI surgery 20.0% of these reported abolition of their tinnitus, 51.2% a subjective improvement, 21.6% no change and 7.2% a deterioration. Of the 49 (28.2%) subjects with no tinnitus preoperatively, 5 developed tinnitus 6 months after CI. These 5 had poorer speech understanding after CI surgery with their device than the group who remained tinnitus free. We found no correlation between tinnitus improvement, age, duration of tinnitus, or change in unaided hearing thresholds between the two sessions.

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A new implantable hearing system, the direct acoustic cochlear stimulator (DACS) is presented. This system is based on the principle of a power-driven stapes prosthesis and intended for the treatment of severe mixed hearing loss due to advanced otosclerosis. It consists of an implantable electromagnetic transducer, which transfers acoustic energy directly to the inner ear, and an audio processor worn externally behind the implanted ear. The device is implanted using a specially developed retromeatal microsurgical approach. After removal of the stapes, a conventional stapes prosthesis is attached to the transducer and placed in the oval window to allow direct acoustical coupling to the perilymph of the inner ear. In order to restore the natural sound transmission of the ossicular chain, a second stapes prosthesis is placed in parallel to the first one into the oval window and attached to the patient's own incus, as in a conventional stapedectomy. Four patients were implanted with an investigational DACS device. The hearing threshold of the implanted ears before implantation ranged from 78 to 101 dB (air conduction, pure tone average, 0.5-4 kHz) with air-bone gaps of 33-44 dB in the same frequency range. Postoperatively, substantial improvements in sound field thresholds, speech intelligibility as well as in the subjective assessment of everyday situations were found in all patients. Two years after the implantations, monosyllabic word recognition scores in quiet at 75 dB improved by 45-100 percent points when using the DACS. Furthermore, hearing thresholds were already improved by the second stapes prosthesis alone by 14-28 dB (pure tone average 0.5-4 kHz, DACS switched off). No device-related serious medical complications occurred and all patients have continued to use their device on a daily basis for over 2 years. Copyright (c) 2008 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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The comprehensive Hearing Preservation classification system presented in this paper is suitable for use for all cochlear implant users with measurable pre-operative residual hearing. If adopted as a universal reporting standard, as it was designed to be, it should prove highly beneficial by enabling future studies to quickly and easily compare the results of previous studies and meta-analyze their data. Objectives: To develop a comprehensive Hearing Preservation classification system suitable for use for all cochlear implant users with measurable pre-operative residual hearing. Methods: The HEARRING group discussed and reviewed a number of different propositions of a HP classification systems and reviewed critical appraisals to develop a qualitative system in accordance with the prerequisites. Results: The Hearing Preservation Classification System proposed herein fulfills the following necessary criteria: 1) classification is independent from users' initial hearing, 2) it is appropriate for all cochlear implant users with measurable pre-operative residual hearing, 3) it covers the whole range of pure tone average from 0 to 120 dB; 4) it is easy to use and easy to understand.