134 resultados para Audiology
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Music plays an important role in the daily life of cochlear implant (CI) users, but electrical hearing and speech processing pose challenges for enjoying music. Studies of unilateral CI (UCI) users' music perception have found that these subjects have little difficulty recognizing tempo and rhythm but great difficulty with pitch, interval and melody. The present study is an initial step towards understanding music perception in bilateral CI (BCI) users. The Munich Music Questionnaire was used to investigate music listening habits and enjoyment in 23 BCI users compared to 2 control groups: 23 UCI users and 23 normal-hearing (NH) listeners. Bilateral users appeared to have a number of advantages over unilateral users, though their enjoyment of music did not reach the level of NH listeners.
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Delivering cochlear implants through a minimally invasive tunnel (1.8 mm in diameter) from the mastoid surface to the inner ear is referred to as direct cochlear access (DCA). Based on cone beam as well as micro-computed tomography imaging, this in vitro study evaluates the feasibility and efficacy of manual cochlear electrode array insertions via DCA. Free-fitting electrode arrays were inserted in 8 temporal bone specimens with previously drilled DCA tunnels. The insertion depth angle, procedural time, tunnel alignment as well as the inserted scala and intracochlear trauma were assessed. Seven of the 8 insertions were full insertions, with insertion depth angles higher than 520°. Three cases of atraumatic scala tympani insertion, 3 cases of probable basilar membrane rupture and 1 case of dislocation into the scala vestibuli were observed (1 specimen was damaged during extraction). Manual electrode array insertion following a DCA procedure seems to be feasible and safe and is a further step toward clinical application of image-guided otological microsurgery.
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Objective: To investigate objective and subjective effects of an adjunctive contralateral routing of signal (CROS) device at the untreated ear in patients with a unilateral cochlear implant (CI). Design: Prospective study of 10 adult experienced unilateral CI users with bilateral severe-to-profound hearing loss. Speech in noise reception (SNR) and sound localization were measured with and without the additional CROS device. SNR was measured by applying speech signals at the untreated/CROS side while noise signals came from the front (S90N0). For S0N90, signal sources were switched. Sound localization was measured in a 12-loudspeaker full circle setup. To evaluate the subjective benefit, patients tried the device for 2 weeks at home, then filled out the abbreviated Speech, Spatial and Qualities of Hearing Scale as well as the Bern benefit in single-sided deafness questionnaires. Results: In the setting S90N0, all patients showed a highly significant SNR improvement when wearing the additional CROS device (mean 6.4 dB, p < 0.001). In the unfavorable setting S0N90, only a minor deterioration of speech understanding was noted (mean -0.66 dB, p = 0.54). Sound localization did not improve substantially with CROS. In the two questionnaires, 12 of 14 items showed an improvement in mean values, but none of them was statistically significant. Conclusion: Patients with unilateral CI benefit from a contralateral CROS device, particularly in a noisy environment, when speech comes from the CROS ear side. © 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel.
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Video-oculography devices are now used to quantify the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) at the bedside using the head impulse test (HIT). Little is known about the impact of disruptive phenomena (e.g. corrective saccades, nystagmus, fixation losses, eye-blink artifacts) on quantitative VOR assessment in acute vertigo. This study systematically characterized the frequency, nature, and impact of artifacts on HIT VOR measures. From a prospective study of 26 patients with acute vestibular syndrome (16 vestibular neuritis, 10 stroke), we classified findings using a structured coding manual. Of 1,358 individual HIT traces, 72% had abnormal disruptive saccades, 44% had at least one artifact, and 42% were uninterpretable. Physicians using quantitative recording devices to measure head impulse VOR responses for clinical diagnosis should be aware of the potential impact of disruptive eye movements and measurement artifacts.
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The present study provided further information about stuttering among bilingual populations and attempted to assess the significance of repeated oral-motor movements during an adaptation task in two bilingual adults. This was accomplished by requesting that bilingual people who stutter to complete an adaptation task of the same written passage in two different languages. Explored was the following research question: In bilingual speakers who stutter, what is the effect of altering the oral-motor movements by changing the language of the passage read during an adaptation task? Two bilingual adults were each requested to complete an adaptation task consisting of 10 readings in two separate conditions. Participants 1 and 2 completed two conditions, each of which contained a separate passage. Condition B consisted of an adaptation procedure in which the participants read five successive readings in English followed by five additional successive readings in Language 1 (L1). Following the completion of the first randomly assigned condition, the participant was given a rest period of 30 minutes before beginning the remaining condition and passage. Condition A consisted of an adaptation procedure in which the participants read five successive readings in L1 followed by five additional successive readings in English. Results across participants, conditions, and languages indicated an atypical adaptation curve over 10 readings characterized by a dramatic increase in stuttering following a change of language. Closer examination of individual participants revealed differences in stuttering and adaptation among languages and conditions. Participants 1 and 2 demonstrated differences in adaptation and stuttering among languages. Participant 1 demonstrated an increase in stuttering following a change in language read in Condition B and a decrease in stuttering following a change in language read in Condition A. It is speculated that language proficiency contributed to the observed differences in stuttering following a change of language. Participant 2 demonstrated an increase in stuttering following a change in language read in Condition A and a minimal increase in stuttering following a change in language read in Condition B. It is speculated that a change in the oral-motor plan contributed to the increase in stuttering in Condition A. Collectively, findings from this exploratory study lend support to an interactive effect between language proficiency and a change in the oral-motor plan contributing to increased stuttering following a change of language during an adaptation task.
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Introdução: Estudos têm demonstrado que doenças crônicas e alterações metabólicas podem atuar como fator de aceleração na degeneração do sistema auditivo decorrente da idade. Todavia, os estudos sobre a associação entre a perda auditiva com o diabetes mellitus (DM) e com a hipertensão arterial (HA) em idosos mostraram conclusões controversas. Sendo assim, novos estudos sobre este assunto são necessários, a fim de esclarecer o efeito destas doenças crônicas sobre o sistema auditivo. Objetivos: Comparar uma audiometria inicial (A1) com uma audiometria sequencial (A2) realizada com um intervalo de 3 a 4 anos em uma população de idosos portadores de DM e/ou HA; realizar um estudo comparativo entre quatro grupos de idosos: grupo controle (GC), formado por idosos sem alterações crônicas, grupo de idosos portadores de DM; grupo de idosos portadores de HA, grupo de idosos portadores de DM e HA. Métodos: Foi realizado um levantamento em 901 prontuários do Estudo Longitudinal de Saúde Auditiva do Adulto (ELSAA), de indivíduos atendidos no Hospital Universitário (HU) da Universidade de São Paulo, no período de 2009 a 2015. De acordo com os critérios de inclusão, foram selecionados 100 indivíduos para participarem da presente pesquisa. A avaliação inicial (A1), constando de anamnese, audiometria tonal e imitânciometria foram utilizadas e foi feita uma nova avaliação audiológica (A2) após o período de 3 a 4 anos. Os participantes foram distribuídos em quatro grupos: 20 indivíduos portadores de DM (grupo DM), 20 indivíduos portadores de HA (grupo HA), 20 indivíduos portadores de DM e HA (grupo DMHA) e 40 indivíduos não portadores de DM nem de HA (GC). Para cada grupo estudo (HA, DM e DMHA), foram selecionados indivíduos (entre os 40 do GC) de forma a parear as características referentes a idade e sexo. Foram utilizados os testes estatísticos ANOVA, teste exato de Fisher e Kruskal-Wallis, com nível de significância de 0,05. Foi também calculada a odds ratio, com intervalo de confiança de 95%. Resultados: Não houve diferença estatisticamente significante entre as orelhas para nenhum dos grupos; sendo assim, as orelhas direita e esquerda foram agrupadas para as outras comparações. Na comparação da média de aumento anual dos limiares auditivos da primeira avaliação A1 com a segunda avaliação A2 entre os grupos, pode-se observar que para o grupo DM, não houve diferença estatisticamente significante para nenhuma das frequências avaliadas, quando comparado ao seu respectivo controle; para o grupo HA foram observadas diferenças significantes a partir de 4kHz, bem como tendência à diferença estatisticamente significante em 3 kHz, quando comparado a seu respectivo controle. Já para o grupo DMHA, quando comparado a seu grupo controle, foram observadas diferenças significantes nas frequências de 500, 2k, 3k e 8kHz, além de tendência à diferença estatisticamente significante em 4k e 6kHz. Considerando-se os casos novos de perda auditiva, pode-se observar que houve diferença estatisticamente significante apenas para o grupo HA, para as frequências altas. Verificou-se também que, para as frequências altas (3k a 8kHz), os números de casos novos de perda auditiva foram sempre maiores nos grupos estudo quando comparados aos seus respectivos controles. Na comparação das médias dos limiares auditivos, tanto na avaliação A1 quanto na avaliação A2, observou-se que os grupos estudo (DM, HA e DMHA) apresentaram limiares auditivos mais prejudicados, quando comparados a seus respectivos grupos controle. Na comparação entre os grupos apenas para a avaliação A2, pode-se observar que para as frequências altas, houve associação estatisticamente significante entre apresentar as condições clínicas (DM, HA e DMHA) e a presença de perda auditiva. A OR para DM foi de 5,57 (2,9-14,65), para HA foi de 4,2 (1,35-13,06) e para DMHA foi de 5,72 (1,85-17,64). Conclusão: Verificou-se que os idosos portadores de DM, HA ou ambos apresentaram limiares auditivos mais rebaixados quando comparados a seus respectivos grupos controle, principalmente nas altas frequências, o que sugere que estas patologias podem ter um efeito deletério sobre a audição. Além disso, nota-se que o grupo HA apresentou limiares auditivos piores para a maioria das frequências e foi o que apresentou maior queda dos limiares auditivos no segmento de 3 a 4 anos, quando comparado aos outros dois grupos estudo (DMHA e DM), sugerindo que dentre as três condições estudadas, a hipertensão parece ser a que teve maior influência sobre a audição
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Shipping list no.: 99-0282-P.
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"IB ; 11-75"--p. 4 of cover.
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Description based on: 1981.
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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This paper outlines a multiprofessional education workshop piloted and subsequently conducted with a cohort of 81 graduate entry students of occupational therapy, physiotherapy, speech pathology and audiology. The rationale for, and format of, the workshop is outlined, followed by comparisons between students' knowledge about teamwork prior to and after the four-hour workshop. The workshop was based on a real case scenario of a child with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD). Students completed pre- and post-workshop questionnaires about their knowledge of DCD, teamwork and the roles of various professionals and parents; and a post-workshop questionnaire about their views regarding the utility of the workshop, its strengths, and learning outcomes. The evaluation indicated that the workshop was overwhelmingly successful from the students' perspective in: (1) enhancing their understanding about DCD and its multifaceted impact on school age children; (2) developing a deeper appreciation of the importance of teamwork itself; (3) refining their understanding of their own profession's role and (4) developing an appreciation of the role of other professions and parents in working with children with complex needs, and their families. Limitations of this study and directions for future research are discussed.
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Spouses of older people with hearing impairment frequently urge their hearing impaired partners to seek help for their hearing difficulties. Only a minority of individuals with hearing impairment are self-motivated, with the majority of clients, especially older clients, presenting at audiology clinics under the persuasion or influence of their spouse or significant other. This highlights the important role that spouses play in initiating aural rehabilitation and indicates that spouses of older people with hearing impairment may become so frustrated with their partners' hearing loss that they are often the primary reason why the hearing impaired person presents for audiological services. To date, however, the number of studies addressing the effect of hearing loss on significant others is limited. Those studies that have investigated the effect of hearing impairment on families are commonly focused on the person with the impairment and most commonly, the significant other has merely been used as a proxy to describe the perceived problems of his or her spouse. Further, there has been no systematic indepth investigation of the needs of spouses of older people with hearing impairment, including the effect of retirement and the increase in time spent together, with the majority of studies focusing primarily on younger spouses of workers affected by noise-induced hearing loss. The cumulative effect of experiencing many years of hearing difficulties with a partner may also influence the extent to which older spouses are affected by hearing impairment. The primary purpose of this article is therefore to critically review the existing literature on the effects of hearing impairment on spouses. It will also provide a rationale for the importance of this topic as a clinical issue and suggest some future directions for research in this area.