Le Prell Colleen G, Spankovich Christopher, Lobariñas Edward, Griffiths Scott K
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL.
J Am Acad Audiol. 2013 Sep;24(8):725-39. doi: 10.3766/jaaa.24.8.9.
Human hearing is sensitive to sounds from as low as 20 Hz to as high as 20,000 Hz in normal ears. However, clinical tests of human hearing rarely include extended high-frequency (EHF) threshold assessments, at frequencies extending beyond 8000 Hz. EHF thresholds have been suggested for use monitoring the earliest effects of noise on the inner ear, although the clinical usefulness of EHF threshold testing is not well established for this purpose.
The primary objective of this study was to determine if EHF thresholds in healthy, young adult college students vary as a function of recreational noise exposure.
A retrospective analysis of a laboratory database was conducted; all participants with both EHF threshold testing and noise history data were included. The potential for "preclinical" EHF deficits was assessed based on the measured thresholds, with the noise surveys used to estimate recreational noise exposure.
EHF thresholds measured during participation in other ongoing studies were available from 87 participants (34 male and 53 female); all participants had hearing within normal clinical limits (≤25 HL) at conventional frequencies (0.25-8 kHz).
EHF thresholds closely matched standard reference thresholds [ANSI S3.6 (1996) Annex C]. There were statistically reliable threshold differences in participants who used music players, with 3-6 dB worse thresholds at the highest test frequencies (10-16 kHz) in participants who reported long-term use of music player devices (>5 yr), or higher listening levels during music player use.
It should be possible to detect small changes in high-frequency hearing for patients or participants who undergo repeated testing at periodic intervals. However, the increased population-level variability in thresholds at the highest frequencies will make it difficult to identify the presence of small but potentially important deficits in otherwise normal-hearing individuals who do not have previously established baseline data.
在正常耳朵中,人类听力对低至20赫兹、高至20000赫兹的声音敏感。然而,人类听力的临床测试很少包括扩展高频(EHF)阈值评估,即频率超过8000赫兹的评估。尽管EHF阈值测试在此目的上的临床实用性尚未得到充分证实,但已有人建议使用EHF阈值来监测噪声对内耳的最早影响。
本研究的主要目的是确定健康的年轻成年大学生的EHF阈值是否随娱乐性噪声暴露而变化。
对实验室数据库进行回顾性分析;纳入所有有EHF阈值测试和噪声暴露史数据的参与者。根据测量的阈值评估“临床前”EHF缺陷的可能性,同时利用噪声调查来估计娱乐性噪声暴露情况。
87名参与者(34名男性和53名女性)提供了在参与其他正在进行的研究期间测量的EHF阈值;所有参与者在常规频率(0.25 - 8千赫兹)下的听力均在正常临床范围内(≤25分贝听力级)。
EHF阈值与标准参考阈值[ANSI S3.6(1996)附录C]紧密匹配。使用音乐播放器的参与者存在统计学上可靠的阈值差异,报告长期使用音乐播放器设备(>5年)或在使用音乐播放器时音量较高的参与者,在最高测试频率(10 - 16千赫兹)下阈值差3 - 6分贝。
对于定期接受重复测试的患者或参与者,应该能够检测到高频听力的微小变化。然而,最高频率下人群水平阈值变异性的增加,将使得难以识别那些原本听力正常但没有先前建立的基线数据的个体中存在的虽小但可能重要的听力缺陷。