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Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in children – Aural Rehab oral methods
-Emphasis in the pathology Central Auditory disorders and impact on speech development, challenges for treatment, hearing aids or other assistive technology.
Auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD) is a rare condition that can affect a person’s ability to hear. Although sounds enter the inner ear normally, signals from the inner ear to the brain are not transmitted properly. As a result, the condition may be associated with mild to severe hearing loss and poor speech-perception abilities (difficulty understanding speech clearly). ANSD can be associated with other neurological disorders such as Friedrich ataxia, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, and Charcot-Marie-Tooth syndrome. The exact underlying cause of ANSD is not completely understood; however, researchers have proposed many possible explanations including damage to the hair cells of the inner ears, faulty connections between the hair cells and the auditory nerve (the nerve connecting the inner ear to the brain), damage to the auditory nerve, and/or a combination of these abnormalities. In many cases, ANSD occurs sporadically in people with no family history of the condition; however, the condition does run in some families suggesting that genetic factors may play a role in some cases. Treatment varies based on the severity of the condition but aims to improve hearing (i.e. hearing aids and cochlear implants) and communication skills.
Four main categories that we create milestone tools around are All of these are going to be interacting with each other. Cognitive and social emotional are hard to separate.
0-3 months | 4- 9 months *TOYS* | 9-18 In which age range does the concept of object permanence typically develop? | |
Active Learning | Forming Pathways
Poor motor control; must rely on others for much of their exposure to the environment |
-Refining motor skills
-Realizes she/he can be an agent -Awareness of cause and effect |
Object permanence (if I hide something under a blanket, it doesn’t disappear forever) ; means to desired ends |
Differentiated actions | Preference for responsive objects (e.g., a rattle)
Coordinated actions on objects (e.g., mouthing, throwing) |
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Development of differential action schemes | Causality;
Symbolic play (pretending something is a phone) |
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Seek out joint focus | Tracking of objects | Continuous visual contact with adults in the environment | |
Communication | Prelinguistic intentional communicative; discovery of intentional communication; development of communicative gestures | ||
Description | ? Early socializing
? Rewarding adults with smiles and coos ? Punishing adults with squirms and cries |
Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children
PIAGET’S 4 STAGES
more about the hardwired nature qualities |
VYGOTSKY
Much more nurture guy. What is the culture surrounding communication and how does that lead to shared knowledge? |
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In the Piagettian tradition, child development is driven by the child. They contain a level of previous knowledge (Assimilated Knowledge) and they fit knew knowledge (Accommodated Knowledge) into their schemata
Sensorimotor Stage ? Random and reflex actions Preoperational Stage ? Egocentric: “emotional terrorist” Concrete Operational Stage ? Talk about talking and thinking ? Socialized speech ? Development of logical thought ? Reversibility (turn taking, if this then that and vice versa) Equilibration = present in all stages ? Children want to learn but things that are not too far outside of their comfort zone ? It is important to maintain a balance between applying previous knowledge (assimilation) and changing behavior to account for new knowledge (accommodation). ? |
Inner Speech – what’s going on inside
? Children’s speech parallels activity/play ? Becomes a tool for planning, conceptualization ? Transitions to cognitive tool, language becomes though ? Babies can’t develop in isolation o Adults act as a scaffold for learning and development to occur. The rate of things happening depends on adults. (Zone of Proximal Development)
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THEORY OF MIND – More recent Rudimentary workings of theory of mind can be seen around 4 years of age.
Even from a young age, because of attention, children are developing their own internal world.
JOINT ATTENTION
DEVELOPMENTAL SCREENING AND SURVEILLANCE: assess issues as soon as possible
FINAL EXAM – PEDIATRICS
MAY 21ST, 2018 – LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT RECEPTIVE AND EXPRESSIVE LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
A child’s ability to parse words into sound units, or combine phonemes into words are dependent upon the child’s: phonological awareness |
PHONETICS | PHONOLOGY | MORPHOLOGY | SYNTAX | SEMANTICS |
the physical properties of speech sounds (phones), and their physiological production
Phoneme: smallest segmental unit of sound employed to form meaningful contrasts All phonemes can be described in terms of:
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the way sounds function in languages, including phonemes, syllable structure, stress, accent, intonation
The way sounds are distinctive units within a language
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the identification, analysis and description of the structure of words
Morpheme: the smallest linguistic unit that has semantic meaning
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the principles and rules for constructing sentences in natural languages
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how language conveys meaning
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PRAGMATICS: Society’s rules for language | ||||
1. Pay attention to another person’s language utterance.
2. Try best to understand what the speaker’s intentions or desires are. 3. Do your best to respond to those intentions cooperatively and constructively.
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Principles and Parameters Theory | Connectionist – kids are constantly figuring out what the rules are |
? Innate capability for language
? Through exposure, child learns which language model to follow [exposure is key] ? Different cognitive parameters are set and become fixed |
? Child derives rules of language through repeated exposure to similar constructions
? Rules can be derived out of these multiple exposures
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Safety words
No-no! Hot! Dirty! |
Politeness words
Please. Thank you. |
Survival Words |
Substantive words
Milk. Mommy. More |
Expressive words
Oops! Uh-oh! Whee! |
Communication functions
? Attention (to self, others, objects) ? Request (objects, actions, information) ? Greets ? Protesting/rejecting ? Responding/acknowledging ? Commenting/informing |
Communication means
? Gestural ? Vocal ? Verbal ? Combinations
Rate: 2.5/ min; whether vocal, gestural, verbal, and combinations |
Specific strategies of babies
? Paying attention to the subject of discussion ? Listening selectively to what adults say ? Providing feedback that indicates whether or not the message was understood |
Specific strategies of toddlers
? Selective imitation of what others say ? Using words to learn more words |
LANGUAGE COMPREHENSION STRATEGIES
What is the order of speech milestones? (4) (1) cooing (2) vocal play (3) canonical babble (4) jargon |
0-2 months | Cry and fussing | Vegetative sounds |
STAGE 1: Cooing/laughter
STAGE 2: Vocal play
Addition of trills, raspberries
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Changes in intensity, pitch
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4.-7. months
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STAGE 3: Canonical babbling – more repetitive with some easy consonants ; Failure to enter canonical babble stage indicative of possible language delay
Variegated babble – much more repetition and more prosody
? 10-12 months ? Simple forms (CV, V, VCV) ? Low prosody |
STAGE 4 Jargon – all prosody with no content
? 12-14 months ? Highly inflected, but lacking content or grammar
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TYPICAL SYNTAX
2 years
-2-word sentences -Noun-verb combinations -Introduction of morphological markers (tense, number, possession)
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3 years
-Three word sentences -Verbs begin to predominate ~75% intelligible -Understands most simple questions dealing with his environment and activities “what do you do when you are sleepy, hungry, or thirsty?“ -Morphosyntactic system relatively figured out -Can make more complex sentences, 2-clauses |
4 years
-Demonstrates understanding of over and under -Understands such concepts as longer, larger, when a contrast is presented
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5 years
-Can use many descriptive words spontaneously-both adjectives and adverbs -Should use fairly long sentences and should use some compound and some complex sentences -Speech on the whole should be grammatically correct
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8 years
-Complex & compound sentences used easily with few lapses in grammatical constrictions-tense, pronouns, plurals
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PRAGMATIC DEVELOPMENT 12 months old
? Use of gestures, vocalizations, and a few “true” words to:
? Request objects/actions ? Refuse/protest ? Comment ? Play communicative games |
Primitive speech acts
? Request action ? Request attention ? Answer ? Request answer ? Protest ? Greet ? Call ? Label ? Repeat ? Practice |
PRAGMATIC DEVELOPMENT 36months old
? Use of language to:
? Replace gestures of 12 month old stage ? Requesting information ? Answering questions ? Acknowledging ? Asking permission ? Requesting indirectly |
? Talks beyond the “here-and-now”
? Tells little stories ? Has a conversation ? Reciprocity, turn taking ? Says more than one utterance per turn ? Rate of intentions increases
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PLAY DEVELOPMENT
? 12 months old
? Presymbolic Schemes ? Conventional use of a few objects; no pretending ? picks up a brush, touches to hair, then drops it; ? picks up toy phone, puts to ear, then sets aside)
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? 36 months old
? Hierarchical pretend schemes ? “Feeds” baby doll, kisses, puts to bed and covers with cloth ? Carries out a tea party with dolls, stuffed animals ? Sets up and carries out story “scenarios” with characters and props |
LANGUAGE DISORDERS- The concept of “normalization”
PREVALENCE OF CHILD LANGUAGE AND RELATED DISORDERS: HIGH INCIDENCE
LATE TALKERS
CLINICAL PRESENTATION
LATE TALKER OR LATE BLOOMER ?
PRELINGUISTIC/RISK/PREMATURITY
? Prematurity:
? <37 weeks GA ? 12% of all babies ? In 70’s a baby < 3 lbs had a 50% chance of surviving; today 90% ? Low Birth Weight: ? 1500 – 2500 grams ? Very Low Birth Weight: ? 1000 – 1500 grams ? Extremely Low Birth Weight: ? < 1000 grams ? 1 lb = grams |
? Why do VLBW and ELBW have neurodevelopmental problems?
? What is a neurodevelopmental problem and how is one determined by physicians? ? One recent study compared ELBW and term children at age 3: found differences in most language domains of 1 SD
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BILINGUALISM
Common “Errors” in ESL children
A disorder is considered present if errors outside of expected patterns occur, and only if they occur in BOTH languages
CLINICAL MANAGEMENT: CHOICES THAT THE AUDIOLOGIST NEEDS TO KNOW ABOUT
SEMANTICS: Vocabulary DEVELOPMENT/ Types of words
Abstract words (e.g., can’t point to them)
Derived words (derivational suffixes and prefixes)
Polysemous words (multiple meanings)
Adverbs of likelihood and magnitude
Cognitive verbs Connectives (adverbial conjuncts) Curriculum-specific words
Metalinguistic and metacognitive verbs
MULTIPLE MEANINGS ASCRIBED TO SAME WORD. ABSTRACT ONES LEARNED LATER. “THE BOY IS BRIGHT.”
As children advance through school they are exposed to more complex vocabulary – words constructed from multiple morphemes.
MAY 28th , 2019 – IMMITANCE
Infants younger than 7 months of age should be tested using a 1000 Hz probe tone because their middle ear system is: mass-dominated
Middle ear acoustic reflex testing may be improved in infants by using a _____ ______ rather than a probe tone wideband signal
COMPONENTS OF CASE HISTORY PAGE 50-51 OF MADELL/FLEXER CHAPTER
Prenatal and birth history
? Complications, Low birth weight, NICU stay, Jaundice, Mother’s age Maternal illness – TORCH ? Toxoplasmosis: 10-20% have SNHL ? Others: Syphilis (3% have SNHL); Varicella-Zoster Virus (few have SNHL) ? Rubella: >65% have hearing loss when rubella acquired in first 4 months of pregnancy ? Cytomegalovirus: 10-20% have progressive SNHL ? Herpes simplex: 25-90% depending on degree of virus dissemination Rh Incompatibility ? Apgar Scores ? Apgar scores and SNHL Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, Respiration ? Utah criteria: (Eichwald & Mahoney, 1993) ? 0-4 at 1 minute ? 0-6 at 5 minutes ? Represents greater risk for SNHL Possible relation to perinatal hypoxia Perinatal Period: Jaundice , NICU length, infections, syndromes, feeding issues, respiratory diseases |
Developmental history
? Psychosocial ? Developmental ? Evaluations: physical therapy occupational therapy speech-language pathology
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Educational history (special services)
? Will results of today’s test affect child’s current placement? ? Is child receiving special services in school and/or outside of school? |
Health history
? Genetic evaluation/referral ? Surgeries? ? Head injuries/falls? ? Specific Diagnoses
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Communication history
? How would you describe your child’s hearing? ? Expressive language ? How does your child communicate his needs? ? Verbal (I’m hungry) ? Gesture (pointing) ? Other (taking parent by hand and dragging to fridge) ? Receptive language ? How well does your child understand you? ? Simple commands (Say “thank you”; Go get your shoes) ? Relative to other children the same age |
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Social History
-Do they play with other children? -What kind of play do they do? -Do they have siblings? Are they developing similarly? |
Hearing Health History
-Family history of hearing loss -Family history of congenital malformations -How are they doing in school? -Noise exposure? -Behavioral changes -ear infections? Sick a lot?
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CLASS PRESENTATIONS | ||||||
VESTIBULAR IMPAIRMENT IN CHILDREN WITH COCHLEAR IMPLANTS (MALINASKY AND KOCON) | ||||||
-50-70% of children with hearing loss have VI
-VI correlates to etiology, not severity of hearing loss |
3 main etiologies cause both hearing loss and vestibular impairment
? Congenital Cytomegalovirus ? Inner ear malformation ? Syndromic hearing loss |
Classified vestibular functioning into 3 grades:
1: Normal 2: Partial dysfunction 3: severe dysfunction and areflexia (absence of calorics |
66% of patients with Usher syndrome, meningitis, CMV, and inner ear malformations had abnormal cVEMPs1
• 58.3% of implanted children showed a decrease in cVEMPs2 |
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Results:
Depending on the etiology, children had worse vestibular functioning post-implantation when tested with calorics ? 50% of the participants had an unknown etiology ? 50% had either Usher Syndrome, inner ear malformations or Connexin 26 |
inner ear malformations lead to a higher risk of VI post-implantation | Best practice is to test calorics, posturography and VEMPs pre- and post-operatively in children – Can give insight into post-implant functioning – Can allow for better rehabilitation post-implantation | ||||
VESTIBULAR DYSFUNCTION AND DYSLEXIA (BARRY AND COPPOLA) – Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children | ||||||
Could central vestibular dysfunction be an underlying mechanism leading to learning disabilities such as dyslexia? | RESULTS FROM ARTICLES
Signi?cant symptomatic overlap within subject ? Learning disabilities are likely all linked to cerebellar vestibular dysfunction ? One underlying mechanism for all learning disabilities Learning disabled patients had signi?cantly different OPKs from the control group ? Learning disabilities and dyslexia appear to have the same underlying CV mechanism that leads to ADD ? Concentration plays a vital role in compensating for CV dysfunction -Patients with dyslexia employed concentration strategies to maintain ocular ?xation ? Patients with dyslexia reported background blurring during testing, whereas control group did not Selective interaction between vestibular exercises, vestibular dysfunction and spatial perception ? Control group: ? Improved in speed of both visual and spatial perceptual processing ? Abnormal VOR/Aerobic exercise: ? Improved only in speed of general visual perceptual processing ? Abnormal VOR/Vestibular exercise: ? Made signi?cant improvements in spatial perceptual processing |
CONCLUSIONS
Cerebellar-vestibular dysfunction can result in a vast array of symptoms, including learning disabilities like dyslexia ? Vestibular tests are an important part of the test battery in identifying and treating learning disabilities ? Vestibular compensation exercises can help patients deal with the symptoms of the CV dysfunction, including dyslexia and other learning disabilities |
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HIV – (HAGER AND HUGHES) | ? | |||||
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is the standard treatment for HIV-infection for the pediatric population.
? Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is simply a combination of ART drugs for multiple viral targets. |
Hearing loss in perinatally HIV-infected and HIV-exposed but uninfected children and adolescents.
– Children exposed to HIV are more likely to qualify for audiometric screenings ? Children exposed to antiretroviral in utero are more likely to qualify for an audiometric evaluation ? Children with CDC Class C diagnosis are more likely to have hearing loss ? PTA is higher in children with HIV “Hearing loss in HIV- infected children in Lilongwe, Malawi.” ? 24% of children with HIV had CHL ? 5.5% of children required hearing aids ? There were higher instances of parental perception of hearing loss and documentation of hearing problems for those in WHO stage 3 or 4 Audiologic and vestibular ?ndings in a sample of Human Immunode?ciency Virus type-1-infected Mexican children under highly active antiretroviral therapy Consistent abnormal ABR results between adults and children with HIV ? HIV increases the chance of otitis media ? Children with HIV had a lower amplitude and prolonged I-V interwave latency in ABR testing ? HAART therapy did not play a role in hearing loss ? Hearing loss could still present in asymptomatic children with HIV |
CONCLUSIONS
Children in the more severe stages of HIV-infection are more likely to have hearing loss ? Of those children who had a hearing loss, conductive losses were the most prevalent ? PTA is likely to be higher in children with HIV ? Due to more cases of hearing loss ? 5.5% of children required hearing aids (Hrapcak, et al.) ? (Where we can help!) ? Abnormal ABR results consistently found with children with HIV ? Lower amplitudes and prolonged I-V interwave latencies ? Increased likelihood of recurrent otitis media ? Hearing loss could possibly be present in asymptomatic children with HIV |
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CARDIAC SURGERY IN INFANCY AS A RD (MOTT & SCHNEIDER) | ? | |||||
Is cardiac surgery the risk factor, or is it some aspect of undergoing cardiac surgery? | Article 1: Prevalence of 6% is significantly high ? When accounting for syndromes, prevalence of 4% is still significantly high ? Remember: no consideration of ototoxic drug us
Article 2: Increased risk for hearing loss in children with CHD ? Children who undergo cardiac surgery at 6 months of age or younger should have at least one audiologic evaluation by 24-30 months to evaluate hearing status Article 3: Unexpected association of PHL with hyposix and bolus administration of furosemide ? Close follow-up is necessary to identify outcomes and seek modifiable predictive variables ? Changes in the mode of furosemide administration may prevent this complication
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This is an important start to understanding a complicated topic!!
? 3 articles with 3 approaches ? All showed a correlation between cardiac surgery and hearing loss ? Evaluate all children who undergo cardiac surgery in infancy ? More research is necessary |
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LANGUAGE ACQUISITION FOR PRELINGUAL | 5 | |||||
Spoken language development is negatively affected by delaying access to linguistic input until auditory input is initiated through hearing aids and/or CIs
? Bilingual-bimodal approach emphasizes the use of ASL and acquiring spoken language through the use of assistive technology |
Conclusions:
Improvements in identi?cation of hearing loss and assistive technology leaves a need to improve and update the model of instruction and acquisition of language ? Even with assistive technology, language deprivation is still a problem leaving ASL and manual communication necessary for robust language development ? Further research is necessary to develop a formal methodology for the implementation of a Bi-Bi program |
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HYPERBILIRUMINIA (PLUARD AND KIM) Affects ~60% of infants | ||||||
Risk for hyperbilirubinemia when levels >18 mg/dl. Excessive levels of bilirubin in the blood
Lesion in brainstem = hearing loss Lesion in ocularmotor = upward gaze
Unconjugated bilirubin (UCB) is a breakdown product of red blood cells (hemoglobin) that is toxic to the brain in its free form UCB processed by liver into conjugated bilirubin and pooped out |
Hyperbilirubinemia is a major risk factor for ANSD
• Initiates cell apoptosis and causes damage to auditory structures including cochlear nueclei in the brainstem, the auditory nerve, and higher order neurons • ANSD is a neuropathy caused by dys- synchronous firing of auditory nerve fibers where sounds enter the inner ear normally, but signals from the inner ear to the brain are transmitted abnormally. Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children |
Those diagnosed with ANSD will have predicatable audiometric results which include:: • Degree of hearing loss can vary from normal to severe • Reflexes will usually be absent • Present OAEs • Abnormal ABR results • Speech recognition scores will be worse than predicted by pure-tones | ||||
TREATMENT
Exchange transfusion – Albumin infusion – Blue light phototherapy – CI may offer synchronous firing of auditory nerve fibers Visual Language Learning – Cued speech, ASL, SEE – Low gain amplification – Low expectations, but not without benefit – If OAE/ CM present, monitor closely – Should still consider a trial! – Cochlear Implant – If patient has very poor WR – Unsuccessful trial with amplification |
Conclusions: Language acquisition is key in neonates
Some will have sound awareness, but complex speech sounds will be distorted & indiscriminate Early diagnosis & intervention! – Parents will often be fooled that their child has normal hearing |
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PEDIATRIC HEARING LOSS: refer siblings. They could be a carrier or it may be recessive. If the child has risk factors, we want to keep them on our assessment schedule. | ||||||
? Risk Indicators for permanent congenital, delayed onset or progressive hearing loss: Caregiver concerns about hearing, speech, language, development
? Family history* of permanent childhood hearing loss ? NICU stay > 5 days or any of following (regardless of length of stay): ? Ototoxic medications (gentimycin, tobramycin) ? Loop diuretics (furosemide, Lasix) ? Hyperbilirubinemia reguiring exchange transfusion ? In Utero infections (cmv*, herpes, rubella, syphillis, toxoplasmosis ? Craniofacial anomalies ? Physical findings (e.g. white forelock) |
? Syndromes* involving hearing loss
? Neurofibromatosis, osteopetrosis, Usher, Waardenburg, Alport, Pendred, Jervell & Lange-Nielson ? Neurodegenerative disorders ? Hunter syndrome ? Sensory motor neuropathies (Frieidrich ataxia, Charcot-Marie-Tooth) ? Culture positive postnatal infections associated with HL* ? Herpes, varicella, meningitis ? Head trauma (basal skull, temporal bone)* ? Chemotherapy* |
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PIERRE ROBIN
? Micrognathia ? Glossoptosis ? Upper airway obstruction ? Cleft palate (U-shaped) ? Gene ? 17q24.3 – q25.1 ? Associated with ? Stickler (STL1; 12q13.11) |
TREACHER COLLINS [Dominant]
? Minor clinical features ? Preauricular hair displacement (26%) ? Atresia or stenosis of EAC (36%) ? Conductive hearing loss (40-50%) ? Ankylosis, hypoplasia or aplasia of ossicles ? Ophthalmologic defects ? Cleft palate ? Airway abnormalities ? Speech and motor development delays |
PERILYMPHATIC FISTULA
SNHL (sudden, progressive) Presence of cochlear malformation
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ENGLARGED LARGE VESTIBULAR AQUEDUCT | |||
May not cause hearing loss but is probably comorbid wit hearing loss. | ||||||
MENINGITIS
– Viral, bacterial infection of CSF – Cochlear implants soon |
NF2
Most common are vestibular schwannoma”Balance disorders, Hearing loss, Tinnitus, Facial paralysis |
WAARDENBURG SYNDROME
Type II associated with deafness Partial albinism |
USHER SYNDROME
3 types, different degrees of vision and hearing loss. CI helps |
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CONDUCTIVE
? Apert Syndrome; Crouzon Syndrome; Pfeiffer syndrome ? Craniosynostosis ? Velocardiofacial (VCF) Syndrome ? Hemifacial microsomia ? Asymmetric skull development ? Nager syndrome ? Cleft palate, coloboma, absent eyelashes, dysmorphic ears, short forearms, clinodactyly/syndactyly |
1.Screen by 1 month of age.
2. If they don’t pass, identify by 3 months of age. 3. Confirmed hearing loss? Intervention (fit) by 6 months. Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children |
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IMMITANCE | ||||
Admittance = Y (mmho). The vector addition of susceptance and conductance.
The middle ear is the impedance matching system between the outer and the inner ear. |
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Infants less than 6 months of age do not have a lot of stiffness in their system (think of the cartilage, lack of ossification) | B and G curve
Separate the two vectors Adults = there are distinct patterns. They refer to the number of peaks identified. Different tones = different patterns. As we move up in frequency, 70% are 3B1G When we look at babies, it’s a lot more variable. |
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PROBE TONE
Why doe we use 226 Hz? It’s easier to interpret one peak. Real reason = if we use 226Hz, then it’s easy to come up with your ear canal volume. G becomes 0 so Y and B are the same.
226 Hz probe tone – most humans have 1B1G pattern. Some infants have more complicated patterns 1000 Hz probe tone – most adults have 3B1G pattern. Children have various patterns.
To get something close to 1B1G, it’s better to use 1000 Hz. 7 months is the cut off. Anything below that, you should use 1000 Hz.
? Higher frequency probe tone more sensitive to ME effusion |
Post Natal Changes to Ear
? Increased bony portion, decreased cartilaginous portion ? Increased size of ear canal, ME space ? Decreased tympanic membrane tilt ? Fusion of tympanic ring ? Decreased ossicular density ? Increased stiffening of ossicular joints ? Closer coupling of stapes to oval window ? Mesenchymal absorption
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WIDEBAND REFLECTANCE | ||||
Measure admittance of middle ear system of all frequencies. You use a chirp as your measurement. | ||||
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OAES ARE TINY AND SOFT.
-OAE = healthy ear. -You can have 30 dB HL loss and still have OAES (mild), so they can’t rule out hearing loss. -Are strongly affected by middle ear pathology (even negative pressure) and/or external ear pathology the signal is traveling back through the ear canal. -Are not recorded if there is too much noise in the environment. |
WHAT’S AN OAE?
-An acoustic signal measured with a microphone in the sealed ear canal. [like tympanometry] As opposed to an electrical signal.
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MEASUREMENT – DPOAE
2f1-f2
RUSH – Absolute amplitude: > -5 dB SPL ?6 dB Signal to Noise Ratio |
CONDUCTIVE LOSS
Not only will conductive loss decrease the effective level of the stimulus at the cochlea, it will attenuate the emission. TEOAEs will be absent or reduced in amplitude – dependent on severity and type of conductive pathology.
Fluid – OAES typically absent. Perfs/PE tubes – whether or not you record OAEs depends on size/position of perforation. Not always recordable. Negative middle ear pressure – OAE amplitude decreased. Presence or absence depends on magnitude of ABG and the amount of negative pressure. Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children |
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WHAT IS AN OTOACOUSTIC EMISSION?
Assessment of inner ear. Present at birth.
USE -Assess OHC function (test tube shape and Prestin electromotility) -Site of lesion battery -Screening for sensory hearing loss -Monitoring cochlear status [if we suspect something is changing the outer hair cells.] -Pseudohypocusis |
DPOAEs have two speakers because two signals are delivered | MEASUREMENT – TEOAE
Transient-evoked OAEs: (1500 Hz-3000 Hz) Reproducibility (looking at two bins and averaging) TE – NF (how much larger is the OAE than the noise floor in a band)
-If you meet the two criteria, the system will say “PASS” and finish. If it doesn’t get it, it will keep averaging. If it fails either, it’s a FAIL. -Frequency reported is the center frequency of narrowband RUSH – 70% Reprod. 0 dB Amplitude ?6 dB Signal to Noise Ratio |
SNHL: OAEs are…
NOT sensitive to retrocochlear hearing loss
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-An acoustic signal measured with a microphone in the sealed ear canal. [like tympanometry] As opposed to an electrical signal.
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HOW DO WE CHANGE FROM TIME DOMAIN TO FREQUENCY DOMAIN? Fourier transform. We are looking for how much energy is occurring in different frequency bands?
500 Hz – 4000 Hz. (largest response from cochlea) Time Window = 20 ms |
Newborn
-smaller ear canal, larger ear pressure -higher noise level -higher rejection level
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Adult | ||
NBHS
ABR / ANSD
PE TUBES | Reason
Reduce otitis media with effusion |
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Most common surgical procedure for kids. | |||||
BENEFITS
-Reduced prevalence of OME -Improved hearing -Improved quality of life
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? Adverse Effects:
? Otorrhea ? Persistent TM perforation ? Pathological abnormalities of the TM
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Research – Follow up 25 years later. -doesn’t affect your hearing loss later | |||||
NBHS
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First screening
? Baby passes both ears -> DONE ? Baby refers one or both ears -> RESCREEN Rescreen ? Baby passes referred ear -> DONE ? Baby refers again -> OUTPATIENT SCREEN Outpatient screen ? Baby passes both ears -> DONE ? Baby refers again -> DIAGNOSTIC EVALUATION |
1970s – risk was assessed at 2 or 3 years.
NOW: 1 Screen all infants before one month of age 3 complete diagnostic evaluations on all failed screenings by 3 months 6 Medical, educational and audiologic intervention before 6 months of age for diagnosed hearing loss
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Maternal Anxiety
? Mothers would rather know
Cost/Benefit ? Better to test and have some false positives than spend money on special education |
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Started in Rhode Island
– Can a newborn screening program be effectively implemented? -99% of babies born in Rhode Island were screened using transient otoacoustic emissions (TEOAE) -Of the 53,121 babies screened, 111 had permanent hearing loss: about 0.2% |
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Risk Factors for hearing loss
? Parent concern ? Family history of hearing loss ? Perinatal asphyxia ? Craniofacial anomalies ? TORCH infections -Bacterial meningitis ? Haemophilus influenzae B ? Vaccinations may reduce incidence ? Hyperbilirubinemia -Low birthweight ? <1500 g |
Pulse, Grimace, Activity, Respiration
Utah criteria: (Eichwald & Mahoney, 1993) ? 0-4 at 1 minute ? 0-6 at 5 minutes Represents greater risk for SNHL -Possible relation to perinatal hypoxia
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Distribution of causes for profound hearing loss in infants
Genetic – 50% Environmental – 50% Nonsyndromic – 70% |
Babies identified with hearing loss should be evaluated by a team
? Audiologist ? Physician (Peds/ENT) ? SLP ? Others who may contribute to IFSP Outpatient rescreen ? Audiologist or Audiology Assistant ? Screening ABR ? Outcome report sent to IDPH |
Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children
ABR, BAER, AEP | Pediatric Sedation for ABR
? 4 months to 5 years ? conscious sedative, mild general anesthesia ? Monitoring: administered and managed by nurse ? monitor O2, HR and BP ? crash cart and suction available ? Negative outcomes associated with: ? overdoses, drug interactions ? non-trained personnel ? injuries on the way to facility (administered at home) ? drugs with long half-lives (chloral hydrate, pentobarbital) ? Air conduction measures should be done with insert earphones ? Headphones can affect latency of waveform HOW? ? Bone conduction measures are needed to rule out conductive loss or find conductive component. ? Use B-70 bone vibrator (max output ~50-55 dB HL) ? Use mastoid placement |
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Summed neural response (microvolt). All the nerve fibers are synchronously firing.
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ADVANTAGES
-Estimates normal hearing thresholds -Ear-specific BC finding Diagnosis of AN |
DISADVANTAGES
-Can’t estimate profound HL -Skilled analysis required -Limited BC intensity levels |
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ELECTROCOCHLEOGRAPHY
– Cochlear microphonic (depolarization repolarization of stereocilia) – SP – AP (wave I) All three of these break down the cochlear potential. |
ASSR – way to extract different information from the cochlea using modulated signals, so you’re using one signal to get responses from multiple locations.
-done with ABR clicks |
ANSD
? Diagnosed based on a pattern of audiologic results =Degree of loss: Normal to severe, bilateral 95% -OAEs: present 75% -Acoustic reflexes: absent 90%, elevated 10% =ABR: abnormal =Cochlear microphonic: present
HBR -Decreased speech recognition |
Management of ANSD
? Amplification – Limited benefit – Addition of FM technology helps in face of low SNR ? Implantation -May improve speech perception -Varied results -What would be a good management strategy for a 7 month old child you identified with ANSD?
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USE: NEUROLOGICAL ASSESSMENTS
– High intensity – Interpeak intervals (I-V, I-III, III-V) – Interaural differences – Screening Threshold estimations Absence or presence of wave V and latency of wave V as a function of stimulus level |
FREQUENCY SPECIFIC
? Tone bursts -Provides information for narrower frequency regions -Better relates to pure tone audiogram -Bone-Conducted stimuli -Should get when either the click or 500-Hz tone bursts responses are not present at expected normal levels. -Why/when to perform BC ABR?
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Fresh Noise/Pediatric Noise – Frequency Specific Hearing Noise. Warble tones are boring. Narrowband noise was mixed up to keep it interesting for children. Can’t be used for responses—it’s not an accurate signal. Can be used to get the child’s attention again.
Madell VIDEO – “Prior to beginning testing, it’s important to determine child’s cognitive age” critical to choosing a test
Age | Warble tones
(dB HL) |
Speech
(dB HL) |
Response |
0-6 wks | 75 | 40-60 | Arousal, Eye widens |
6 wks – 4 mos | 70 | 45 | Rudimentary turn |
4-7 mos | 50 | 20 | Lateral head turn |
7-9 mos | 45 | 15 | Direct to side |
9-13 mos | 40 | 10 | Direct to side, below |
13-16 mos | 30 | 5 | Direct localization |
16-24 mos | 25 | 5 | Direct localization |
Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children
Toddler/Preschool Hearing Assessment Can present in sound field, bone oscillator, speakers, headphones of some sort. | ||||||||
WHY DON’T YOU USE NARROWBAND?
The bandwidth is quite wide. If a child had a sloping/rising hearing loss, there could be some off frequency listening going on and responses that were not indicative of that loss. |
BOA: younger than 6 mos // VRA: 6 months-3 years [developmental age] // CPA: 2.5-5 years
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HEARING TESTING
? Ultimately you want to get ear specific information. ? Frequency presentation varies from Hughson-Westlake ? Based on frequency band importance and ability to interpolate ? 2000 500 4000 1000 Time is of the essence |
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Visual Reinforcement Audiometry VRA (6 months – 3 years) | Detectable stimulus presented child turns toward stimulus reinforcer activated
? Begins by building association between the stimulus ? Once relationship is established the reinforce is used to reward the headturn ? the reinforcer can be a lighted, animated toy or an animation on a screen
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Conditioning Orienting Response
–Reinforcer only presented when child localizes correctly -Adds layer of cognitive complexity that may be too much for younger children -Requires two reinforcers, one for each ear. |
CONDITIONING
Response shaping – Sound presented at level that child can hear – When child looks to toy, tester lights up toy – If child doesn’t look, assistant can prompt child to lookat the toy Conditioning criteria – Three consecutive responses at same level as response shaping with no prompting. Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children |
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Children older than 6 months
-Muscle control [looking for head turn] -Cognitive development equal to 5 ½ months of age on Bayley Scales of Infant Development |
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OPERANT BEHAVIOR
-Willful or purposeful behavior – rather than a reflex -Increased or decreased in frequency by the changes it brings about in the environment – Conditioning shapes the desired behavior by applying positive or negative reinforcement |
-If the child doesn’t condition well
to tones, and hearing loss is suspected, switch to bone conduction -Condition child to the vibrotactile input. When the child feels the vibration, the toy will light up! -Move from hand to mastoid. ? If BC thresholds can be ? obtained, move back t ? o AC.
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REINFORCEMENT
Verbal praise, Clapping, A sticker
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? 100% reinforcement schedule [every time they look]
? If you drop, younger kids tend to be more interested. [Will I get it this time?] ? Rapid conditioning ? Rapid habituation ? Intermittent reinforcement schedule ? Slower conditioning ? Slower habituation ? Primus & Thompson, 1985 ? Found no difference in response of 2-year olds with either schedule ? If you are not sure the response was true, DO NOT REINFORCE ? Not reinforcing a true response won’t habituate the child any sooner |
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Conditioned Play Audiometry 2.5 5 years
Children have left Piaget’s Sensorimotor Stage and entered Preoperational Stage (Mastered turn-taking, Are able to make associations) ? They like to play simple games ? They have longer attention spans Establish rapport, elicit speech |
SNHL -2000, 500, 4000, 1000
CHL -500, 2000, 250, 1000 (also prioritize BC) |
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Procedure
Instructions stimulus child takes play turn audiologist reinforces with praise |
Young children need modeling
? Audiologist can demonstrate the task ? Parent can demonstrate the task ? Physically manipulating the child, hand-over-hand, to do the task may be necessary the first couple times If fail: vibrotactile, revert to VRA |
Test Order: [Select the order where you can get the most information.]
Tympanometry, OAE, Pure tones, Soundfield, Phones Speech Soundfield, Phones
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Behavioral Observational Audiometry Younger Than 6 Mos Test Of Responsiveness, Not Sensitivity | ||||||||
Madell: Baby is held
Observing changes in sucking, startling, eyes widening, it is a reflex. |
? You have to agree what your method will be and then stick to it.
? Make sure it is repeatable and not just a random occurrence. ? An extra set of eyes is extremely helpful. ? Takes a lot of training to become reliable ? If false alarm rate is greater than 25%, you can’t make a just assessment. |
Signal
Noisemakers: Bells, percussion, etc. Broad or complex spectral characteristics, Hard to control intensity level Pure tones: Easy to control level, Infants less inclined to respond to tones and narrow bandwidth stimuli |
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? Probability of a response depends upon
? State of infant ? Nature of stimulus ? Ambient noise levels ? Agreement among observers ? Leads to many false-positives and false-negatives
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JULY 2ND – SPEECH TESTING
As children develop language, they can complete more complicated speech tests with higher levels of vocabulary.
When performing speech testing, have in mind whether you are going to be monitoring development of this child and how you want to show changes. Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children
Conductive loss :loss might come and go. Might do well at one appointment. Might be fine at conversational level, and then test at soft and they might do worse.
SNHL: can be pretty predictable.
SPEECH TESTING -JULY 2nd | |||||||||||
Average talker, average effort, 4 feet away
? ~60 dB SPL ? ~50 dB HL ? the summed level across all frequencies of the speech signal, averaged over time (the LTASS: long-term average speech spectrum). |
? Speech is a broadband signal
? From fundamental frequency ~100 Hz ? To fricated noise ~16,000 Hz ? Majority of speech is up to 8000 Hz. ? Our sensitivity for low frequencies is not as good.
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Easiest sounds to see are the hardest to hear.
Vowels are low frequency. /f/ is high frequency |
Communication strategies
– Reduce distance – Reduce noise – Sound-treat environments – Avoid poor acoustic environments. Technology – FM systems Looped systems |
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Speaker dependent
– Vocal quality – Vocal amplitude – Clear speech (expanded vowel space, slower speech rate, word-final consonant release, more intense stop consonants)
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Listener dependent
– Hearing loss – Attention/fatigue (teach kids to look at you if they didn’t understand) – Audiological intervention (hearing aids, cochlear implants) Medical/behavioral intervention (if it’s attention/fatigue—which is outside our scope) |
Environment dependent
– Distance (reduced amplitude. 6 dB per doubled distance in freefield; reduced access to visual cues- children under six may not take advantage of lip-reading cues anyway. ) – Noise (masking of speech signal, broadband noise less disruptive than speech noise. Children require greater signal to noise ratio for speech recognition equal to adults). Auditory Neuropathy (ANSD) in Children Reverberation (early reverberations enhance signal; late reverberations mask signal) |
– Lower frequencies – more intensity
– High frequencies – less intensity – So if you have a high frequency hearing loss, despite those fluctuations |
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Why do speech testing?
? Determine the extent of the hearing loss’ effect on speech perception ? Identify children at risk for delayed speech/language development ? Monitor progress during treatment |
Evaluating Speech
-Threshold vs. suprathreshold -Open-set vs. Closed-set (Digits, alphabet) -Recorded vs. Live Voice -Presentation Level -Presentation Condition -Test Complexity -Scoring (total accuracy, phoneme scoring) |
Speech Detection Threshold
-Detection threshold: lowest level at which a stimulus is detected 50% of the time -Broadband detection: running speech -Narrowband detection: phonemes Ling-6 sounds /m/, /a/, /u/, /i/, /?/, /s/ “Ling-3” sounds /ba/, /?/, /s/ -Generally these sounds are presented via live voice -Adjust level with attenuator dial of audiometer -Keep an eye on the VUmeter |
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Auditory skills hierarchy
Detection (SRT) Discrimination Identification (also called recognition) Comprehension (replying to a question and answering. Don’t tend to use comprehension in audiology) |
Speech Reception/Recognition Threshold
-Recognition threshold: lowest level at which a stimulus is identified 50% of the time -Spondee repetition -Body-part identification, Potato-Head task -Picture pointing |
IT-MAIS/MAIS – Parent questionnaire
“Does your child produce well-formed syllables and syllable-sequences that are recognized as speech?” Never – Always Can be used pre-post intervention
Early Speech Perception (ESP) a closed-set test that examines pattern perception (Hop hop hop for a bunny. “Vroom” for a car) |
Easier: WIPI (Word Intelligibility by Picture Identification)
Harder: PB-K Words (Phonetically Balanced Kindergarten)
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TESTS [brown – closed] | |||||||||||
PBK
– open-set word list – monosyllabic -Four 50-word lists |
NU-CHIPs
-4 forced choice test -3-5 years |
WIPI
-6 forced choice (a little bit harder. That’s why the age recommendation is older) -4-6 years |
GASP
– Sentences: Series of WH-Questions -Words: various syllabic |
HINT-C (noise in testing)
-Presented at 70 dB SPL in soundfield. -Recommended for children 5 years and older |
Multisyllabic Lexical Neighborhood
Word lists dependent on child’s experience and their age Provide reliable information about the spoken word recognition abilities of children with profound hearing loss who use cochlear implants |
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SELECTING A PROTOCOL | |||||||||||
– A goal of pediatric speech testing is to find the limits of the child’s auditory skills using a test appropriate for their cognitive and auditory abilities.
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Mendel
? Supports a battery that examines various domains of perception ? Phonetic segments ? Words ? Discourse |
Madell
? Supports a battery that hones in on not-quite-mastered level of speech perception at environmentally valid levels ? Choose pick based on language age. ? Four year old that’s cognitively on track, needed a hearing aid and just got it a few months ago you might need to pick something simpler. ? Should be tested in quiet
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