Walker Elizabeth, McCreery Ryan, Spratford Meredith, Roush Patricia
J Am Acad Audiol. 2016 Mar;27(3):204-218. doi: 10.3766/jaaa.15050.
Up to 15% of children with permanent hearing loss (HL) have auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD), which involves normal outer hair cell function and disordered afferent neural activity in the auditory nerve or brainstem. Given the varying presentations of ANSD in children, there is a need for more evidence-based research on appropriate clinical interventions for this population.
This study compared the speech production, speech perception, and language outcomes of children with ANSD, who are hard of hearing, to children with similar degrees of mild-to-moderately severe sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL), all of whom were fitted with bilateral hearing aids (HAs) based on the American Academy of Audiology pediatric amplification guidelines.
Speech perception and communication outcomes data were gathered in a prospective accelerated longitudinal design, with entry into the study between six mo and seven yr of age. Three sites were involved in participant recruitment: Boys Town National Research Hospital, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the University of Iowa.
The sample consisted of 12 children with ANSD and 22 children with SNHL. The groups were matched based on better-ear pure-tone average, better-ear aided speech intelligibility index, gender, maternal education level, and newborn hearing screening result (i.e., pass or refer).
Children and their families participated in an initial baseline visit, followed by visits twice a year for children <2 yr of age and once a yr for children >2 yr of age. Paired-sample t-tests were used to compare children with ANSD to children with SNHL.
Paired t-tests indicated no significant differences between the ANSD and SNHL groups on language and articulation measures. Children with ANSD displayed functional speech perception skills in quiet. Although the number of participants was too small to conduct statistical analyses for speech perception testing, there appeared to be a trend in which the ANSD group performed more poorly in background noise with HAs, compared to the SNHL group.
The American Academy of Audiology Pediatric Amplification Guidelines recommend that children with ANSD receive an HA trial if their behavioral thresholds are sufficiently high enough to impede speech perception at conversational levels. For children with ANSD in the mild-to-severe HL range, the current results support this recommendation, as children with ANSD can achieve functional outcomes similar to peers with SNHL.
高达15%的永久性听力损失(HL)儿童患有听觉神经病谱系障碍(ANSD),该障碍涉及正常的外毛细胞功能以及听神经或脑干中传入神经活动紊乱。鉴于ANSD在儿童中的表现各异,需要更多基于证据的研究来确定针对该人群的适当临床干预措施。
本研究比较了患有ANSD且听力困难的儿童与轻度至中度重度感音神经性听力损失(SNHL)程度相似的儿童的言语产生、言语感知和语言发育结果,所有儿童均根据美国听力学学会的儿科放大指南佩戴了双耳助听器(HAs)。
言语感知和沟通结果数据采用前瞻性加速纵向设计收集,研究对象年龄在6个月至7岁之间。有三个地点参与了受试者招募:博伊兹敦国家研究医院、北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校和爱荷华大学。
样本包括12名患有ANSD的儿童和22名患有SNHL的儿童。两组根据较好耳纯音平均听阈、较好耳助听听阈言语清晰度指数、性别、母亲教育水平和新生儿听力筛查结果(即通过或转诊)进行匹配。
儿童及其家庭参加了一次初始基线访视,之后2岁以下儿童每年随访两次,2岁以上儿童每年随访一次。采用配对样本t检验比较患有ANSD的儿童和患有SNHL的儿童。
配对t检验表明,ANSD组和SNHL组在语言和发音指标上无显著差异。患有ANSD的儿童在安静环境中表现出功能性言语感知技能。尽管参与言语感知测试的受试者数量过少,无法进行统计分析,但与SNHL组相比,ANSD组在佩戴助听器的背景噪声环境下表现似乎更差,存在这样一种趋势。
美国听力学学会儿科放大指南建议,如果患有ANSD的儿童行为听阈足够高,足以妨碍其在对话水平的言语感知,则应进行助听器试用。对于轻度至重度HL范围内患有ANSD的儿童,当前结果支持这一建议,因为患有ANSD的儿童可以取得与患有SNHL的同龄人相似的功能发育结果。