Sunder Bukya, Manish Kumar Gupta, S B Rathna Kumar
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Hearing loss usually slopes towards the high-frequency regions of hearing in the elderly population. We assessed the speech perception performance in an elderly patient with high-frequency sloping hearing loss under different aided conditions as a function of speech stimuli and listening conditions. The participant was a 69-year-old male with symmetrical and post-lingually acquired bilateral high-frequency sloping sensorineural hearing loss. Speech recognition score testing was conducted under conventional and nonlinear frequency compression (NFC) settings of the hearing aids using conventional and high-frequency wordlists in quiet and + 5 dB SNR listening conditions. The participant outperformed speech perception for conventional wordlists compared to high-frequency wordlists in the conventional setting. Similarly, the participant outperformed speech perception for high-frequency wordlists in the NFC setting compared to the conventional setting. Finally, the participant underperformed speech perception in the noisy compared to quiet listening conditions, irrespective of hearing aid settings and wordlists. The conventional wordlists overestimated the performance of the conventional setting for speech perception. Other than evaluating the actual performance of the conventional setting, the high-frequency wordlists estimated some of the benefits of the NFC setting over the conventional setting for speech perception.
期刊介绍:
Indian Journal of Otolaryngology and Head & Neck Surgery was founded as Indian Journal of Otolaryngology in 1949 as a scientific Journal published by the Association of Otolaryngologists of India and was later rechristened as IJOHNS to incorporate the changes and progress.
IJOHNS, undoubtedly one of the oldest Journals in India, is the official publication of the Association of Otolaryngologists of India and is about to publish it is 67th Volume in 2015. The Journal published quarterly accepts articles in general Oto-Rhino-Laryngology and various subspecialities such as Otology, Rhinology, Laryngology and Phonosurgery, Neurotology, Head and Neck Surgery etc.
The Journal acts as a window to showcase and project the clinical and research work done by Otolaryngologists community in India and around the world. It is a continued source of useful clinical information with peer review by eminent Otolaryngologists of repute in their respective fields. The Journal accepts articles pertaining to clinical reports, Clinical studies, Research articles in basic and applied Otolaryngology, short Communications, Clinical records reporting unusual presentations or lesions and new surgical techniques. The journal acts as a catalyst and mirrors the Indian Otolaryngologist’s active interests and pursuits. The Journal also invites articles from senior and experienced authors on interesting topics in Otolaryngology and allied sciences from all over the world.
The print version is distributed free to about 4000 members of Association of Otolaryngologists of India and the e-Journal shortly going to make its appearance on the Springer Board can be accessed by all the members.
Association of Otolaryngologists of India and M/s Springer India group have come together to co-publish IJOHNS from January 2007 and this bondage is going to provide an impetus to the Journal in terms of international presence and global exposure.