Sherlock LaGuinn P, Formby Craig
Army Hearing Division, United States Army Public Health Center, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Aberdeen, Maryland; National Military Audiology and Speech Pathology Center, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland.
Department of Communicative Disorders, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
Semin Hear. 2017 Feb;38(1):53-70. doi: 10.1055/s-0037-1598065.
Most clinicians approach the objective fitting of hearing aids with three goals in mind: audibility, comfort, and tolerance. When these three amplification goals have been met, the hearing aid user is more likely to adapt to and perceive benefit from hearing aid use. However, problems related to the loudness of sounds and reduced sound tolerance, which may or may not be reported by the aided user, can adversely impact adaptation to amplification and the individual's quality of life. Although there are several standardized questionnaires available to evaluate hearing aid benefit and satisfaction, there is no standardized questionnaire or interview tool for evaluating reduced sound tolerance and the related impact on hearing aid use. We describe a 36-item tool, the Sound Tolerance Questionnaire (STQ), consisting of six sections, including experience with hearing aids, sound sensitivity/intolerance, medical and noise exposure histories, coexisting tinnitus problems, and a final question to differentiate the primary and secondary problems related to sound intolerance, tinnitus, and hearing loss. In its current format as a research tool, the STQ was sensitive in pinpointing vague sound tolerance complaints not reported by the study participants in eligibility screening by Formby et al. A refined version of the STQ, the Sound Tolerance Interview and Questionnaire Instrument (STIQI), structured as a two-part tool, is presented in the appendix for prospective clinical use. The STIQI has potential utility to delineate factors contributing to loudness complaints and/or reduced sound tolerance in individuals considering hearing aid use, as well as those who have been unsuccessful hearing aid users secondary to loudness complaints or sound intolerance. The STIQI, when validated and refined, also may hold promise for predicting hearing aid benefit and/or assessing treatment-related change over time of hearing aid use or interventions designed to remediate problems of loudness and/or sound intolerance among hearing aid candidates or users.
可听度、舒适度和耐受性。当这三个放大目标都实现后,助听器使用者更有可能适应并从使用助听器中获益。然而,与声音响度和声音耐受性降低相关的问题(助听器使用者可能报告,也可能不报告),会对适应放大以及个人生活质量产生不利影响。尽管有几种标准化问卷可用于评估助听器的益处和满意度,但尚无用于评估声音耐受性降低及其对助听器使用相关影响的标准化问卷或访谈工具。我们描述了一种包含36个条目的工具——声音耐受性问卷(STQ),它由六个部分组成,包括助听器使用体验、声音敏感度/不耐受性、医疗和噪声暴露史、并存的耳鸣问题,以及最后一个用于区分与声音不耐受、耳鸣和听力损失相关的主要和次要问题的问题。以其当前作为研究工具的形式,STQ在精准识别Formby等人在资格筛查中未被研究参与者报告的模糊声音耐受性投诉方面很敏感。附录中给出了STQ的改进版本——声音耐受性访谈和问卷调查工具(STIQI),它被构建为一个两部分的工具,供未来临床使用。STIQI有可能用于确定在考虑使用助听器的个体以及那些因响度投诉或声音不耐受而使用助听器不成功的个体中,导致响度投诉和/或声音耐受性降低的因素。经过验证和完善后,STIQI也可能有望预测助听器的益处和/或评估随着时间推移助听器使用或旨在纠正助听器候选者或使用者的响度和/或声音不耐受问题的干预措施相关的治疗变化。