在 COVID-19 大流行期间,不同个人防护设备对使用单侧人工耳蜗的儿童声音辨别能力的影响

Ayatallah Raouf Sheikhany, Safinaz Nageib Azzab, Mohamed Ayman Mohamed Shawky, Ahmed Ali Abdelmonem
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摘要

COVID-19 大流行迫使人们穿戴个人防护设备(PPE),这可能会损害语言交流和语音清晰度。研究的第一个目的是研究穿戴个人防护设备对语音治疗师在治疗过程中嗓音和语言参数的影响。第二个目的是研究语音治疗师佩戴这些个人防护设备对使用单侧人工耳蜗的儿童听觉辨别凌氏六音的影响。这项研究是一项病例对照研究,在贝尼苏伊夫大学和开罗大学医院的语音门诊进行。四名语音医师参与了这项研究,Dr. Speech 软件分析了他们在发出 Ling 的六种声音时的语音和声音参数。每位语音医师对每种 Ling 音单独发音四次,以评估基频和强度:第一次不戴任何口罩,第二次戴手术口罩,第三次戴面罩,第四次戴 N95 口罩。研究还包括 40 名使用单侧人工耳蜗的患者(A 组)和 40 名外周听力正常的儿童(B 组)。语音医师再次发出 Ling 的六种声音,以评估两组儿童的听觉辨别力。对两组儿童的主观听觉辨别力也进行了四次测试:第一次不戴任何口罩,第二次戴外科口罩,第三次戴面罩,第四次戴 N95 口罩。戴面罩时,Ling 的六种声音强度明显最低。无论使用哪种个人防护设备,单侧人工耳蜗患者对(毫米)声的辅音辨别能力都较差。手术口罩和 N95 的声学性能最好,而面罩的声学性能最差。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effect of different personal protective equipment on sound discrimination in children using unilateral cochlear implants during the COVID-19 pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic obliged people to wear personal protective equipment (PPEs), which can harm verbal communication and speech intelligibility. The first aim was to study the impact of wearing PPEs on the voice and speech parameters of phoniatricians during therapy sessions. The second aim was to study the effect of phoniatricians wearing these PPEs on auditory discrimination of the Ling’s six sounds in children using unilateral cochlear implants. The study was a case–control one, done in the phoniatrics outpatient clinics at Beni-Suef University and Cairo University hospitals. Four phoniatricians participated in this study, and the Dr. Speech software analyzed their speech and voice parameters during utterance of the Ling’s six sounds. Each phoniatrician uttered each Ling sound individually four times to assess fundamental frequency and intensity: first time without wearing any mask, second time while wearing a surgical mask, third time while wearing a face shield, and fourth time while wearing an N95 mask. The study also included forty patients using unilateral cochlear implants (group A) and forty children with normal peripheral hearing (group B). The phoniatricians again uttered the Ling’s six sounds to assess auditory discrimination in both groups. This subjective auditory discrimination was also tested in both groups four times: first time without wearing any mask, second time while wearing a surgical mask, third time while wearing a face shield, and fourth time while wearing an N95 mask. The intensity of Ling’s six sounds was significantly lowest in the face shield. Regardless of the PPE type, patients with unilateral cochlear implants showed less consonant discrimination of (mm) sound. Surgical masks and N95 provided the best acoustic performance, while face shields had the worst.
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