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Association between speech perception in noise and electrophysiological measures: an exploratory study of possible techniques to evaluate cochlear synaptopathy in humans / Lynn Megarbane ; Adrian Fuente in International Journal of Audiology IJA, Vol. 59, n°6 (Juin 2020)
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Titre : Association between speech perception in noise and electrophysiological measures: an exploratory study of possible techniques to evaluate cochlear synaptopathy in humans Type de document : Article Auteurs : Lynn Megarbane ; Adrian Fuente Année de publication : 2020 Article en page(s) : p. 427-433 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Electrophysiologie auditive ; Perception de la parole ; synaptopathie cochléaireRésumé : Objective: The primary aim of this study was to investigate whether scores for a speech-in-noise test were associated with the results of two electrophysiological techniques mainly targeting low spontaneous rate, high-threshold auditory fibres.
Design: Cross-sectional study. Participants were evaluated with the hearing-in-noise test (HINT), along with the Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR) with and without ipsilateral noise. The wave V/I amplitude ratio for the ABR without ipsilateral noise and ABR wave V latency shift in the presence of ipsilateral noise were obtained.
Study sample: Twenty adults aged between 20 and 34 years (10 females) who did not report occupational exposure to noise were selected. All participants presented with normal hearing thresholds (0.2508 kHz) and the presence of distortion product otoacoustic emissions, bilaterally.
Results: A significant association between the wave V/I amplitude ratio for the left ear and the HINT scores for the left ear was found.
Conclusions: Based on the results of this study, in normal-hearing listeners, the wave V/I ratio is associated with speech-in-noise performance, specifically in the left ear. This non-invasive procedure has the potential to be used in clinical populations who present with speech-in-noise difficulties despite having normal audiograms.Accès : Contactez la bibliothèque d'Ixelles si le lien vers la ressource électronique ne fonctionne plus Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://www-tandfonline-com.ezproxy.vinci.be/doi/pdf/10.1080/14992027.2020.17187 [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=256289
in International Journal of Audiology IJA > Vol. 59, n°6 (Juin 2020) . - p. 427-433[article]AudioChip: A Deep Phenotyping Approach for Deconstructing and Quantifying Audiological Phenotypes of Self-Reported Speech Perception Difficulties / Ishan S. Bhatt in Ear and hearing, Vol. 43, n°3 (Mai-juin 2022)
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Titre : AudioChip: A Deep Phenotyping Approach for Deconstructing and Quantifying Audiological Phenotypes of Self-Reported Speech Perception Difficulties Type de document : Article Auteurs : Ishan S. Bhatt ; Raquel Dias ; Nathan Wineinger ; Sheila Pratt ; Jin Wang ; Nilesh Washnik ; O'neil W. Guthrie ; Jason Wilder ; Ali Torkamani Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : p. 1023-1036 Note générale : Doi 10.1097/AUD.0000000000001158 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : Autres descripteurs
Facteur genetique
HE Vinci
Compréhension dans le bruit ; Phénotype ; Potentiels évoqués auditifs du tronc cérébral (ABR) ; synaptopathie cochléaire ; Tests dichotiques (audiologie)Mots-clés : Audeme Audeome AudioChip AudioChipping PhenoChip Résumé : Objectives: About 15% of U.S. adults report speech perception difficulties despite showing normal audiograms. Recent research suggests that genetic factors might influence the phenotypic spectrum of speech perception difficulties. The primary objective of the present study was to describe a conceptual framework of a deep phenotyping method, referred to as AudioChipping, for deconstructing and quantifying complex audiometric phenotypes.
Design: In a sample of 70 females 18 to 35 years of age with normal audiograms (from 250 to 8000 Hz), the study measured behavioral hearing thresholds (250 to 16,000 Hz), distortion product otoacoustic emissions (1000 to 16,000 Hz), click-evoked auditory brainstem responses (ABR), complex ABR (cABR), QuickSIN, dichotic digit test score, loudness discomfort level, and noise exposure background. The speech perception difficulties were evaluated using the Speech, Spatial, and Quality of Hearing Scale-12-item version (SSQ). A multiple linear regression model was used to determine the relationship between SSQ scores and audiometric measures. Participants were categorized into three groups (i.e., high, mid, and low) using the SSQ scores before performing the clustering analysis. Audiometric measures were normalized and standardized before performing unsupervised k-means clustering to generate AudioChip.
Results: The results showed that SSQ and noise exposure background exhibited a significant negative correlation. ABR wave I amplitude, cABR offset latency, cABR response morphology, and loudness discomfort level were significant predictors for SSQ scores. These predictors explained about 18% of the variance in the SSQ score. The k-means clustering was used to split the participants into three major groups; one of these clusters revealed 53% of participants with low SSQ.
Conclusions: Our study highlighted the relationship between SSQ and auditory coding precision in the auditory brainstem in normal-hearing young females. AudioChip was useful in delineating and quantifying internal homogeneity and heterogeneity in audiometric measures among individuals with a range of SSQ scores. AudioChip could help identify the genotype-phenotype relationship, document longitudinal changes in auditory phenotypes, and pair individuals in case-control groups for the genetic association analysis.Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=J [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=295813
in Ear and hearing > Vol. 43, n°3 (Mai-juin 2022) . - p. 1023-1036[article]La corrélation entre les paramètres ECochG et le comportement auditif précoce après implantation cochléaire chez les enfants / Konrad Johannes Stuermer ; Dirk Beutner ; Barbara Streicher in International Journal of Audiology IJA, Vol. 55, n°1-12 (January-December 2016)
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Titre : La corrélation entre les paramètres ECochG et le comportement auditif précoce après implantation cochléaire chez les enfants Type de document : Article Auteurs : Konrad Johannes Stuermer ; Dirk Beutner ; Barbara Streicher Année de publication : 2016 Article en page(s) : p. 412-418 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Electrocochléographie ; Implants cochléaires ; Neuropathie auditive (NA) ; Perte auditive neurosensorielle ; synaptopathie cochléaire
Autres descripteurs
Implantation cochleaire precoceRésumé : Objectif : Le résultat individuel après implantation cochléaire chez les enfants atteints de synaptopathie / neuropathie auditive (AS / AN) est difficile à prévoir. Un outil d'évaluation préopératoire serait utile pour conseiller les parents. Cette étude évalue les résultats après IC chez les enfants atteints d'AS / AN et de perte auditive neurosensorielle (SNHL), et les corrèle avec les résultats ECochG préopératoires afin de trouver des paramètres spécifiques de valeur pronostique. Conception : L'amélioration du comportement auditif après IC a été évaluée rétrospectivement à l'aide du questionnaire LittlEARS et quantifiée dans un score (LS). Ce score était corrélé avec le rapport CAP / SP dans l'ECochG préopératoire. Le score était en outre corrélé avec l'âge du patient six mois après l'IC. Échantillon d'étude:Neuf enfants avec AS / AN ont été comparés à neuf enfants avec SNHL. Résultats : Les deux groupes ont montré une amélioration significative du LS après IC. Il y avait une corrélation positive significative entre le rapport CAP / SP et l'amélioration de LS chez tous les enfants. La corrélation entre l'âge et le LS était significativement négative dans le groupe SNHL et positive dans le groupe AS / AN. Conclusion : Tous les enfants atteints d'AS / AN et de SNHL bénéficient dans une mesure similaire de l'IC. Le rapport CAP / SP évalué en préopératoire a une valeur pronostique pour le développement d'un comportement auditif après IC. Accès : Contactez la bibliothèque d'Ixelles si le lien vers la ressource électronique ne fonctionne plus Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://www-tandfonline-com.ezproxy.vinci.be/doi/pdf/10.3109/14992027.2016.11723 [...] Format de la ressource électronique : Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=253759
in International Journal of Audiology IJA > Vol. 55, n°1-12 (January-December 2016) . - p. 412-418[article]Exemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité International journal of audiology IJA. Vol. 55, n°1-12 (January-December 2016) Périodique papier Ixelles Rez Consultation sur place uniquement
Exclu du prêtCutting Through the Noise: Noise-Induced Cochlear Synaptopathy and Individual Differences in Speech Understanding Among Listeners With Normal Audiograms / Mishaela DiNino in Ear and hearing, Vol.43, n°1 (Janvier-février 2022)
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Titre : Cutting Through the Noise: Noise-Induced Cochlear Synaptopathy and Individual Differences in Speech Understanding Among Listeners With Normal Audiograms Type de document : Article Auteurs : Mishaela DiNino ; Lori L. Holt ; Barbara Shinn-Cunningham Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : p. 9-22 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Audition dans le bruit ; Perception de la parole ; synaptopathie cochléaireRésumé : Following a conversation in a crowded restaurant or at a lively party poses immense perceptual challenges for some individuals with normal hearing thresholds. A number of studies have investigated whether noise-induced cochlear synaptopathy (CS; damage to the synapses between cochlear hair cells and the auditory nerve following noise exposure that does not permanently elevate hearing thresholds) contributes to this difficulty. A few studies have observed correlations between proxies of noise-induced CS and speech perception in difficult listening conditions, but many have found no evidence of a relationship. To understand these mixed results, we reviewed previous studies that have examined noise-induced CS and performance on speech perception tasks in adverse listening conditions in adults with normal or near-normal hearing thresholds. Our review suggests that superficially similar speech perception paradigms used in previous investigations actually placed very different demands on sensory, perceptual, and cognitive processing. Speech perception tests that use low signal-to-noise ratios and maximize the importance of fine sensory details- specifically by using test stimuli for which lexical, syntactic, and semantic cues do not contribute to performance-are more likely to show a relationship to estimated CS levels. Thus, the current controversy as to whether or not noise-induced CS contributes to individual differences in speech perception under challenging listening conditions may be due in part to the fact that many of the speech perception tasks used in past studies are relatively insensitive to CS-induced deficits. Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=J [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=291020
in Ear and hearing > Vol.43, n°1 (Janvier-février 2022) . - p. 9-22[article]Decreased Reemerging Auditory Brainstem Responses Under Ipsilateral Broadband Masking as a Marker of Noise-Induced Cochlear Synaptopathy / Fabrice Giraudet in Ear and hearing, Vol. 42, n°4 (Juillet- Aout 2021)
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Titre : Decreased Reemerging Auditory Brainstem Responses Under Ipsilateral Broadband Masking as a Marker of Noise-Induced Cochlear Synaptopathy Type de document : Article Auteurs : Fabrice Giraudet ; Ludimila Labanca ; Marion Souchal ; Paul Avan Année de publication : 2021 Article en page(s) : p. 1062-1071 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Exposition au bruit ; Masquage perceptif ; Potentiels évoqués auditifs du tronc cérébral (ABR) ; synaptopathie cochléaireRésumé : Objectives: In mammals, a 2-hr exposure to an octave-band noise (OBN) at 100 to 108 dB SPL induces loss of synaptic ribbons between inner hair cells and auditory nerve fibers with high thresholds of response (hiT neurons), that encode high-intensity sounds. Here, we tackle the challenge of diagnosing this synaptopathy by a noninvasive functional audiological test, ultimately in humans, despite the expected absence of auditory-threshold elevation and of clear electrophysiological abnormality, hiT neuron contributions being hidden by those of more sensitive and robust neurons.
Design: The noise-induced synaptopathy was replicated in mice (at 94, 97, and 100 dB SPL; n = 7, 7, and 8, respectively, against 8 unexposed controls), without long-lasting auditory-threshold elevation despite a twofold decrease in ribbon-synapse number for the 100-dB OBN exposure. Auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) were collected using a simultaneous broadband noise masker just able to erase the ABR response to a 60-dB tone burst. Tone burst intensity was then increased up to 100 dB SPL for eliciting reemerging ABRs (R-ABRs), dependent on hiT neurons as more sensitive neurons are masked.
Results: In most ears exposed to 97-dB-SPL and all ears exposed to 100-dB-SPL OBN, contrary to controls, R-ABRs from the overexposed region have vanished, whereas standard ABR distributions widely overlap.
Conclusions: R-ABRs afford an individual noninvasive marker of normal-auditory-threshold cochlear synaptopathy. A simple modification of standard ABRs would allow hidden auditory synaptopathy to be searched in a patient.Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=J [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=289112
in Ear and hearing > Vol. 42, n°4 (Juillet- Aout 2021) . - p. 1062-1071[article]Effectiveness of Auditory Measures for Detecting Hidden Hearing Loss and/or Cochlear Synaptopathy: A Systematic Review / Christi M. Barbee ; Jessica A. James ; Jin Hyung Park ; Emily M. Smith ; Carole E. Johnson ; Shari Clifton ; Jeffrey L. Danhauer in Seminars in hearing, Vol. 39 ,n° 2 (May 2018)
PermalinkEffects of Including Information about Hidden Hearing Loss in an Adopt-A-Band Program on College Band Members' Attitudes toward Healthy Hearing Behaviors / Katie L. Seever ; Carole E. Johnson ; Jonathan Baldwin ; Jeffrey L. Danhauer ; Brian Wolfe ; Stevana Jeannont in Seminars in hearing, Vol. 39 ,n° 2 (May 2018)
PermalinkExamining the Profile of Noise-Induced Cochlear Synaptopathy Using iPhone Health App Data and Cochlear and Brainstem Electrophysiological Responses to Fast Clicks Rates / Wafaa A. Kaf ; Madison Turntine ; Abdullah Jamos ; Jacek Smurzynski in Seminars in hearing, Vol.43, n°3 (August 2022)
PermalinkExtended High-frequency Hearing Impairment Despite a Normal Audiogram: Relation to Early Aging, Speech-in-noise Perception, Cochlear Function, and Routine Earphone Use / Srikanta K. Mishra in Ear and hearing, Vol. 43, n°3 (Mai-juin 2022)
PermalinkIdiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: Speech Intelligibility Deficits Following Threshold Recovery / Masahiro Okada in Ear and hearing, Vol. 42, n°4 (Juillet- Aout 2021)
PermalinkMiddle Ear Muscle Reflex and Word Recognition in "Normal-Hearing" Adults: Evidence for Cochlear Synaptopathy? / Anita M. Mepani in Ear and hearing, Vol. 41, n°1 (Janvier-Février 2020)
PermalinkNeuropathie auditive et implantation cochléaire : résultat chez un patient de 6 ans porteur d'une mutation du gène qui code pour l'otoferline / Natalie Loundon ; Arnaud Coez in Cahiers de l'audition, Vol. 36, n°2 (Mars-Avril 2023)
PermalinkNeuropathies auditives et spécificités de l'accompagnement audioprothétique du patient implanté cochléaire / Eric Bizaguet in Cahiers de l'audition, Vol. 34, n°5 (Septembre/octobre 2021)
PermalinkReliability of Measures Intended to Assess Threshold-Independent Hearing Disorders / Aryn M. Kamerer in Ear and hearing, Vol. 40, n°6 (novembre-décembre 2019)
PermalinkSearch for Electrophysiological Indices of Hidden Hearing Loss in Humans: Click Auditory Brainstem Response Across Sound Levels and in Background Noise / Chandan Suresh in Ear and hearing, Vol. 42, n°1 (Janvier-Février 2021)
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