Subjective Hearing Assessment: Pure-Tone and Speech Audiometry Flashcards

1
Q

Testing on adults and school-aged children

A

SUBJECTIVE (behavioral) testing
Complete audiometric examination:
Case history
Otoscopy
Pure tone testing air conduction (right/left)
Pure tone testing bone conduction (right/left)
Speech audiometry
Spondee/speech reception THRESHOLD (dB level): SRT
Word recognition score (percentage): WRS (sometimes called “discrim”)

Tympanometry
Acoustic reflexes

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2
Q

Audiometer

A

Device used to determine hearing thresholds that generates the pure-tone
signals of various frequencies as well as masking noise and speech
Calibrated regularly by a qualified professional to ensure that output is equivalent to a known standard

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3
Q

TWO TYPES OF audiometer

A

Clinical: used for behavioral audiometric assessment
Screening: used for screening (pure-tone stimuli only)

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4
Q

Two main components of Audiometer

A

Oscillator: generates pure-tone stimuli
Attenuator: controls intensity of stimuli presented

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5
Q

Oscillator

A

generates pure-tone stimuli

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6
Q

Attenuator:

A

controls intensity of stimuli presented

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7
Q

Different stimuli used with audiometer

A

Pure tones: 125Hz-12kHz (250-8000Hz)
Speech

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8
Q

Different transducers used
with audiometer

A

Headphone: two types
Supra-aural
Insert
Bone oscillator
Loudspeakers (for soundfield testing)

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9
Q

Sound-Treated Audiometric Booth

A

Two layers of metal panels for walls, with holes in walls for cables

Thick metal double doors close tightly to prevent sounds from leaking in
Incandescent (rather than fluorescent) lights used to reduce ambient noise level

Ventilation with sound attenuation
Raised floor is carpeted
No windows (except between audiologist and patient)

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10
Q

Case history obtains the following

A

Pertinent identifying information
Nature of past and present hearing problems
Other medical problems
Prior use of amplification

TAKE THE TIME TO DO YOUR HOMEWORK! It will pay off

For children, additional information includes
Details about mother’s pregnancy and the child’s birth
Development of gross and fine motor skills, development of speech and language
Childhood diseases

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11
Q

Otoscopy

A

Otoscopy: inspection of the pinna and EAM using an otoscope for the presence of
outer ear malformation/earpits/tags
foreign bodies
occluding cerumen
signs of inflammation/irritation
blood/pus/scarring/dried blood

Appearance of TM also noted
Normal TM is gray/translucent with manubrium visible
ME disease may be suspected if
TM bulging or distended or opaque
Fluid is visible in ME space, or
Scars, perforations, and/or tears are present

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12
Q

Air conducti

A

Air conduction: threshold obtained using headphones (supra-aural or insert)
Degree of hearing sensitivity determined
Slight, mild, moderate, moderately-severe, severe, profound
Tests outer, middle, and inner ear

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13
Q

Bone conduction:

A

: threshold obtained with bone oscillator
Type of hearing loss determined
Conductive, sensorineural, mixed
Thresholds reflect function of cochlea/inner ear only (outer- and middle-ear function bypassed)

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14
Q

Air Conduction Assessment

A

Start at 40 dB HL
Use staircase method (down 10 dB/up 5 dB strategy) to determine threshold
Watch this YouTube video:

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15
Q

Frequencies tested with air conduction

A

Typically, octave frequencies of 250, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000, 8000 Hz assessed
Interoctave frequencies of 750, 1500, 3000, and 6000 may also be assessed
Tested if there is a 15-dB difference between two octave frequencies or if patient is considering amplification

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16
Q

Patient Response

A

Instructions given to patient when tone is heard
Audiologist should avoid inadvertently giving cues
Raise hand
Press response button
Vocal response (“yes”)

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17
Q

False Responses

A

False negative: no response when one is required
False positive: response when no stimulus is presented

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18
Q

Bone Conduction Assessment

A

Signals via bone oscillator (usually placed on the mastoid process of the temporal bone )

The pure tone directly stimulates the cochlea, bypassing the outer ear and middle ear systems

If air conduction shows a reduction in hearing sensitivity but bone conduction shows normal sensitivity, the impairment probably results from an obstruction of the outer or middle ear (conductive hearing loss)
If air- and bone-conduction thresholds are similar, a sensorineural hearing loss is presumed

19
Q

Normal hearing

A

Bone and Air conduction are the same

20
Q

Conductive hearing lost

A

bone conduction results are
normal and air conduction is bad

21
Q

sensorineural hearing lost

A

Air and bone conduction are bad at equal amount

22
Q

mixed hearing lost

A

Bone is poor and air is even poorer:

23
Q

Bone Conduction Assessment Continuation

A

Start at 40 dB HL
Use staircase strategy (down 10 dB/up 5 dB) (same as air conduction assessment)
Frequencies tested: 500, 1000, 2000, 4000 Hz
Interoctave frequencies tested if assessed during A/C up to 6000 Hz
Recording
< threshold of right ear (unmasked)
> threshold of left ear (unmasked)
[ threshold of right ear (masked)
] threshold of left ear (masked)

24
Q

Air–Bone Gap

A

Difference between A/C and B/C thresholds at a given frequency

Air–bone gaps ≥15 dB represent a significant conductive hearing loss in adults
In pediatric clients, more conservative air–bone gap of ≥10 dB HL is used
May require medical referral, even if the A/C thresholds are ≤25 dB HL at all frequencies

When A/C and B/C thresholds are approximately the same at all test frequencies, this suggests a sensorineural loss

25
Q

Mixed Hearing Loss cont

A

When both A/C and B/C thresholds are reduced in sensitivity, but B/C testing yields better results than A/C testing

The patient’s hearing loss is partially conductive and partially sensorineural

26
Q

Masking

A

The process by which the threshold of a stimulus is elevated by the simultaneous introduction of another sound

Used whenever there is a possibility of cross-hearing, which is the reception of a sound signal during a hearing test (either by A/C or B/C) at the ear opposite the ear under assessment

When masking is used
Air conduction testing
Both pure-tone and speech assessments
Bone conduction measurements

27
Q

Masking cont

A

Sound (typically frequency-specific narrowband noise) presented to the non-test ear to prevent it from perceiving the test signal presented to the test ear

28
Q

Cross hearing:

A

contralateralization of the test signal (crosses to opposite ear)

29
Q

Interaural attenuation

A

Interaural attenuation: the loss of energy of a sound presented either by A/C or B/C as it travels from the test ear to the non-test ear (aka crossover levels)
Air conduction: depends on transducer used
Supra-aural phones = 40 dB HL
Insert phones = 70 dB HL
Bone conduction = 0 dB HL

30
Q

Rationale for Speech Audiometry

A

Main goal: to quantify a patient’s ability to understand everyday communication
Why?
We don’t speak in pure tones, nor do we speak at threshold levels
A basic tool in the overall assessment of hearing handicap

Other goals in speech audiometry
Check validity of pure-tone audiometry
Determine reference for suprathreshold testing
Assessment of amplification or rehabilitation
Estimate degree of communicative function
Monitor progress in aural rehabilitation

31
Q

Calibrated amplifying system
Inputs

A

microphone, tape recorder, CD player

32
Q

Calibrated amplifying system
outputs

A

earphones, bone oscillator, loudspeaker in the test room

33
Q

Clinical Decisions in Speech Audiometry

A

Mode of test presentation
Voice (monitored live voice, MLV)
Tape/CD (preferred mode of presentation)

Mode of response
Voice
Written (i.e., forced choice)
Sign language

Listening conditions

Masking

34
Q

Speech reception threshold

A

Speech reception threshold (SRT): lowest intensity at which a person can identify simple speech materials approximately 50% of the time

35
Q

Assessment of Speech Threshold

A

Speech reception threshold (SRT): lowest intensity at which a person can identify simple speech materials approximately 50% of the time

Obtain threshold for speech in dB HL
Staircase method used (as in AC and BC)
Word lists: spondaic words (spondees)
Spondee: two-syllable words with equal emphasis on each syllable; low-frequency-dominant sounds

36
Q

Word recognition score (WRS)

A

Word recognition score (WRS)
Also called speech discrimination score (SDS) or word discrimination score (WDS)
Phonetically balanced (PB) monosyllabic word lists

37
Q

Assessment of Suprathreshold Speech Recognition

A

Word recognition score (WRS)
Also called speech discrimination score (SDS) or word discrimination score (WDS)
Phonetically balanced (PB) monosyllabic word lists

Multiple-choice tests (e.g., California Consonant Test)
Sentence tests

38
Q

Assessment of Suprathreshold Speech Recognition cont

A

Obtain score in % correct
Either 50 words (full list) or 25 words (half list) used

Method to determine WRS
More often than not, present at 35 dB above SRT
Determine “MCL” most comfortable listening level

39
Q

Word Recognition Score List

A

Carrier phrase: “Say the word…” (VU meter)
In order of difficulty
mew, bathe, felt, ache, knees, twins, thing, stove, true, skin
as, she, or, it, jam, me, there, aisle, them, wet, could, toe, not, up, you

Phonemically balanced

40
Q

Word Recognition Scores cont

A

88-100%: EXCELLENT
72-84%: GOOD
60-68%: FAIR
Below 60%: POOR

41
Q

Uncomfortable loudness level (UCL) and most comfortable loudness level (MCL)

A

Uncomfortable loudness level (UCL) and most comfortable loudness level (MCL)

Both suprathreshold levels are determined in dB HL
Method to determine each level
Dynamic range: the difference between UCL and SRT
Example: UCL = 110 dB HL; SRT = 10 dB HL
Dynamic range in this case equals 100 dB

42
Q

Speech-in-competition measures

A

Speech-in-competition measures
Sentence recognition tests
Synthetic Sentence Identification (SSI)
Speech-in-noise (SPIN) test
Staggered Spondaic Word (SSW) test

Ling 6-sound test
/a/, /u/, /i/, /m/, /sh/, /s/
Measured as number correct

43
Q

Issues in Speech Audiometry

A

Masking to avoid cross hearing
Recommended whenever speech audiometry is assessed

Testing non-native speakers of English
Numerous word lists available for purchase in Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, French, Tagalog, Polish, Russian (just to name a few languages)