Dual-Sensory Impairment: When 1+1=3

Harvey B. Abrams
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Most of us are aware of the growing literature that supports a relationship between hearing loss and other health conditions, such as depression, falls, cognitive impairment, and dementia. Age-related vision impairment has been associated with an increased risk of experiencing some of these same disorders. 2Figure 1: Trajectories of cognition scores by the presence of any sensory impairment in the 2015 China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study. Source: Rong, H., Lai, X., Jing, R., Wang, X., Fang, H., Mahmoudi, E. (2020). Association of sensory impairments with cognitive decline and depression among older adults in China. JAMA Network Open, 3(9):e2014186. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.14186HOW COMMON IS DSI? What we know about the prevalence of DSI largely depends on the measures used to identify it. Some prevalence data are based on objective measures such as audiometry or the Snellen chart, while others rely on self-reported or functional measures of hearing and vision impairment. One study conducted in the United States using objective measures 3 estimated the prevalence of DSI in older adults at 3% increasing to 12% among those 85 years of age and older. WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES OF DSI? DSI has been associated with increased risks of dementia, depression, social anxiety, falls, and death. Given that either hearing or vision impairment increases the risks of many of the same disorders, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that DSI, compared with a single sensory impairment, may further increase the risks associated with these conditions. For example, investigators in South Korea followed over 6,500 individuals with DSI as part of a longitudinal study on cognitive aging and dementia. 4 At baseline, DSI was positively associated with dementia prevalence compared with those with normal sensory function. Over the six-year follow-up period, DSI was associated with higher odds of dementia incidence than hearing or visual impairment alone. In a similar study conducted in the United States, researchers followed over 7,500 Medicare beneficiaries who self-reported vision or hearing impairment. 5 Data collected after seven years indicated that those with DSI were at greater risk for developing dementia than those with hearing or vision impairment only. The consequences of DSI extend well beyond cognitive impairment. Pardhan et al. 6 researched the impact of DSI on depression and chronic anxiety among 23,089 adults participating in the Spanish National Health Survey of 2017. The researchers analyzed self-reported vision, hearing, depression, and chronic anxiety and found that vision or hearing impairment was significantly associated with higher odds for depression (OR = 2.37, 95% CI = 2.04 – 2.75 and 2.1, 95% CI = 1.67 – 2.64, respectively) and highest for DSI (OR = 3.86, 95% CI = 2.72 – 5.44). Visual or hearing impairment also increased the odds of chronic anxiety (OR = 1.98, 95% CI = 1.7 – 2.32 and 1.94, 95% CI = 1.54 – 2.46, respectively) and were highest for DSI (OR = 3.38, 95% CI = 2.38 – 4.82). Cosh et al. 7 also found a significant association between DSI and depression and anxiety as part of a longitudinal examination of a Norwegian population-based database. Rong and colleagues examined the effects of vision, hearing, and DSI on both depression and cognition among over 18,000 individuals followed as part of the China Health and Retirement Study. 8 While both vision and hearing impairment were independently associated with greater depression and poorer cognition, the combination of impairments resulted in the poorest outcomes. Figure 18 illustrates the consequences associated with visual impairment only, hearing impairment only, and DSI on global cognition scores as a function of age. DSI was associated with a greater risk of cognitive impairment among individuals of all ages followed in the study until about the age of 85 where hearing impairment alone and DSI posed a similar risk. Gopinath and colleagues 9 collected data from 1,478 participants in the Blue Mountains Eye Study to determine the association between DSI and incidence of falls. Individuals with best corrected visual impairment and mild hearing loss had a greater than twofold risk of falls over the five-year period of the study. DSI also appears to be associated with a greater risk of all-cause mortality than either vision or hearing impairment alone. The AGES-Reykjavik Study 10 involved over 4,900 Icelandic individuals enrolled in a large epidemiological study who received hearing examinations between 2002 and 2006 and who were prospectively followed for mortality through 2009. It turned out that individuals with hearing loss or visual impairment had a higher risk of death resulting from cardiovascular disease than those without hearing or visual impairment; and those with DSI had a higher risk of mortality than those with only hearing or vision impairment. Similarly, Tan et al. 11 conducted a systematic review of studies that examined the relationship between hearing loss and DSI with mortality. The investigators analyzed the results of 27 studies that met their inclusion criteria (14 retrospective and 13 prospective study designs representing a total of 1,213,756 participants). Their analysis revealed that, compared with those with normal hearing and vision, participants with DSI had a significantly higher risk (i.e., hazard ratio; HR) of all-cause mortality (HR = 1.40, 95% CI = 1.30 – 1.51) and, specifically, cardiovascular mortality (HR = 1.86, 95% CI = 1.31 – 2.65). Extending the consequences of multisensory impairment to other modalities (smell and taste, in addition to vision and hearing), Liljas and colleagues 12 found that quality of life decreased, and depression increased as the number of impaired sensory modalities increased among a sample of 6,147 individuals in the English Longitudinal Study of Aging (May 2016 – June 2017). Not surprisingly, those reporting three to four sensory impairments experienced the poorest quality of life. WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS OF DSI FOR HEARING CARE PROFESSIONALS? Your older patients will likely have multiple chronic conditions, so consider the following: Update your intake forms to include questions related to comorbid conditions associated with hearing and vision impairment. Ask your patients when they last had their eyes examined or eyeglass prescription updated. Screen your patients for visual impairment. Ask your older patients to read something out loud (e.g., a sample from one of your patient education brochures or a hearing aid user manual). Develop and build relationships with vision care specialists in your community. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The American psychologist and architect of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, Abraham Maslow, is credited with the expression, “If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.” 1 We can extend Maslow’s observation to: “If all you have is a set of headphones, everything looks like a pair of ears.” As hearing care specialists, we are often so focused on the ears that we neglect the other pair of sensory organs staring right at us—the eyes. Indeed, the same demographic that experiences age-related hearing impairment (presbycusis), is likely to also experience age-related vision impairment (presbyopia). This coexistence of hearing and visual impairments is known as dual-sensory impairment, or DSI. Most of us are aware of the growing literature that supports a relationship between hearing loss and other health conditions, such as depression, falls, cognitive impairment, and dementia. Age-related vision impairment has been associated with an increased risk of experiencing some of these same disorders. 2Figure 1: Trajectories of cognition scores by the presence of any sensory impairment in the 2015 China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study. Source: Rong, H., Lai, X., Jing, R., Wang, X., Fang, H., Mahmoudi, E. (2020). Association of sensory impairments with cognitive decline and depression among older adults in China. JAMA Network Open, 3(9):e2014186. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.14186HOW COMMON IS DSI? What we know about the prevalence of DSI largely depends on the measures used to identify it. Some prevalence data are based on objective measures such as audiometry or the Snellen chart, while others rely on self-reported or functional measures of hearing and vision impairment. One study conducted in the United States using objective measures 3 estimated the prevalence of DSI in older adults at 3% increasing to 12% among those 85 years of age and older. WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES OF DSI? DSI has been associated with increased risks of dementia, depression, social anxiety, falls, and death. Given that either hearing or vision impairment increases the risks of many of the same disorders, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that DSI, compared with a single sensory impairment, may further increase the risks associated with these conditions. For example, investigators in South Korea followed over 6,500 individuals with DSI as part of a longitudinal study on cognitive aging and dementia. 4 At baseline, DSI was positively associated with dementia prevalence compared with those with normal sensory function. Over the six-year follow-up period, DSI was associated with higher odds of dementia incidence than hearing or visual impairment alone. In a similar study conducted in the United States, researchers followed over 7,500 Medicare beneficiaries who self-reported vision or hearing impairment. 5 Data collected after seven years indicated that those with DSI were at greater risk for developing dementia than those with hearing or vision impairment only. The consequences of DSI extend well beyond cognitive impairment. Pardhan et al. 6 researched the impact of DSI on depression and chronic anxiety among 23,089 adults participating in the Spanish National Health Survey of 2017. The researchers analyzed self-reported vision, hearing, depression, and chronic anxiety and found that vision or hearing impairment was significantly associated with higher odds for depression (OR = 2.37, 95% CI = 2.04 – 2.75 and 2.1, 95% CI = 1.67 – 2.64, respectively) and highest for DSI (OR = 3.86, 95% CI = 2.72 – 5.44). Visual or hearing impairment also increased the odds of chronic anxiety (OR = 1.98, 95% CI = 1.7 – 2.32 and 1.94, 95% CI = 1.54 – 2.46, respectively) and were highest for DSI (OR = 3.38, 95% CI = 2.38 – 4.82). Cosh et al. 7 also found a significant association between DSI and depression and anxiety as part of a longitudinal examination of a Norwegian population-based database. Rong and colleagues examined the effects of vision, hearing, and DSI on both depression and cognition among over 18,000 individuals followed as part of the China Health and Retirement Study. 8 While both vision and hearing impairment were independently associated with greater depression and poorer cognition, the combination of impairments resulted in the poorest outcomes. Figure 18 illustrates the consequences associated with visual impairment only, hearing impairment only, and DSI on global cognition scores as a function of age. DSI was associated with a greater risk of cognitive impairment among individuals of all ages followed in the study until about the age of 85 where hearing impairment alone and DSI posed a similar risk. Gopinath and colleagues 9 collected data from 1,478 participants in the Blue Mountains Eye Study to determine the association between DSI and incidence of falls. Individuals with best corrected visual impairment and mild hearing loss had a greater than twofold risk of falls over the five-year period of the study. DSI also appears to be associated with a greater risk of all-cause mortality than either vision or hearing impairment alone. The AGES-Reykjavik Study 10 involved over 4,900 Icelandic individuals enrolled in a large epidemiological study who received hearing examinations between 2002 and 2006 and who were prospectively followed for mortality through 2009. It turned out that individuals with hearing loss or visual impairment had a higher risk of death resulting from cardiovascular disease than those without hearing or visual impairment; and those with DSI had a higher risk of mortality than those with only hearing or vision impairment. Similarly, Tan et al. 11 conducted a systematic review of studies that examined the relationship between hearing loss and DSI with mortality. The investigators analyzed the results of 27 studies that met their inclusion criteria (14 retrospective and 13 prospective study designs representing a total of 1,213,756 participants). Their analysis revealed that, compared with those with normal hearing and vision, participants with DSI had a significantly higher risk (i.e., hazard ratio; HR) of all-cause mortality (HR = 1.40, 95% CI = 1.30 – 1.51) and, specifically, cardiovascular mortality (HR = 1.86, 95% CI = 1.31 – 2.65). Extending the consequences of multisensory impairment to other modalities (smell and taste, in addition to vision and hearing), Liljas and colleagues 12 found that quality of life decreased, and depression increased as the number of impaired sensory modalities increased among a sample of 6,147 individuals in the English Longitudinal Study of Aging (May 2016 – June 2017). Not surprisingly, those reporting three to four sensory impairments experienced the poorest quality of life. WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS OF DSI FOR HEARING CARE PROFESSIONALS? Your older patients will likely have multiple chronic conditions, so consider the following: Update your intake forms to include questions related to comorbid conditions associated with hearing and vision impairment. Ask your patients when they last had their eyes examined or eyeglass prescription updated. Screen your patients for visual impairment. Ask your older patients to read something out loud (e.g., a sample from one of your patient education brochures or a hearing aid user manual). Develop and build relationships with vision care specialists in your community. Continue to educate yourself concerning chronic conditions associated with hearing, vision, and dual-sensory impairment to include cognitive impairment, depression, anxiety, and falls.
双感觉障碍:当1+1=3时
与单独的视力或听力障碍相比,DSI似乎与更大的全因死亡率相关。AGES-Reykjavik研究10涉及4900多名冰岛人,他们参加了一项大型流行病学研究,他们在2002年至2006年期间接受了听力检查,并在2009年之前对他们的死亡率进行了前瞻性随访。结果表明,听力损失或视力受损的人比没有听力或视力受损的人死于心血管疾病的风险更高;患有DSI的人比那些只有听力或视力障碍的人有更高的死亡率。同样,Tan等人11对听力损失和DSI与死亡率之间关系的研究进行了系统回顾。研究人员分析了符合纳入标准的27项研究的结果(14项回顾性研究和13项前瞻性研究设计,共1,213,756名参与者)。他们的分析显示,与那些听力和视力正常的人相比,DSI的参与者有明显更高的风险(即风险比;HR)的全因死亡率(HR = 1.40, 95% CI = 1.30 - 1.51),特别是心血管死亡率(HR = 1.86, 95% CI = 1.31 - 2.65)。将多感觉障碍的后果扩展到其他模式(嗅觉和味觉,除了视觉和听觉),Liljas和同事发现,在英国老龄化纵向研究(2016年5月至2017年6月)的6147个样本中,随着感觉障碍的数量增加,生活质量下降,抑郁症增加。毫不奇怪,那些报告有三到四种感觉障碍的人经历了最差的生活质量。dsi对听力保健专业人员的影响是什么?您的老年患者可能患有多种慢性疾病,因此请考虑以下问题:更新您的摄入表格,包括与听力和视力障碍相关的合并症。询问你的病人最近一次检查眼睛或更新眼镜处方是什么时候。检查你的病人是否有视力障碍。让你的老年病人大声朗读一些东西(例如,从你的病人教育手册或助听器使用手册中的一个样本)。与你所在社区的视力保健专家发展和建立关系。继续了解与听力、视力和双感官损伤相关的慢性疾病,包括认知障碍、抑郁、焦虑和跌倒。
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来源期刊
Hearing Journal
Hearing Journal Health Professions-Speech and Hearing
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
112
期刊介绍: Established in 1947, The Hearing Journal (HJ) is the leading trade journal in the hearing industry, reaching more than 22,000 hearing healthcare professionals. Each month, the Journal provides readers with accurate, timely, and practical information to help them in their practices. Read HJ to find out about the latest developments in patient care, technology, practice management, and professional issues. Popular monthly features include the Cover Story, Page Ten, Nuts & Bolts, HJ Report, and the Final Word.
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