Utoomprurkporn Nattawan, Stott Joshua, Costafreda Sergi, Bamiou Doris-Eva
Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.
UCL Ear Institute, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2022 Feb 25;14:785406. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.785406. eCollection 2022.
It has been proposed that hearing loss may result in improved visuospatial abilities. The evidence for this assertion is inconsistent, and limited to studies in congenitally deaf children, despite older adults with age-related hearing loss constituting the vast majority of the hearing impaired population. We assessed visuospatial (visuoconstruction and visuospatial memory) ability in older adult hearing aid users with and without clinically significant cognitive impairment. The primary aim of the study was to determine the effect of hearing loss on visuospatial abilities.
Seventy-five adult hearing aid users (HA) aged over 65 were recruited, out of whom 30 had normal cognition (NC-HA), 30 had mild cognitive impairment (MCI-HA), and 15 had dementia (D-HA). The Rey Osterrieth Complex figure test (ROCFT) copy, 3 min recall and 30 min recall tests were performed to evaluate the visuoconstructional and visuospatial memory abilities of the participants.
There were significant differences between the ROCFT copy, 3 min recall, and 30 min recall among the three cohorts ( < 0.005). Compared with previously published normative data, the NC-HA performed significantly better in the ROCFT copy ( < 0.001), immediate recall ( < 0.001), and delay recall ( = 0.001), while the MCI-HA performed similarly to the expected norms derived from population ( = 0.426, = 0.611, = 0.697, respectively), and the D-HA performed below this norm.
Though visuospatial abilities tend to decline when the global cognitive functioning declines, we found suggestive evidence for positive effects of age-related hearing loss on visuospatial cognitive ability. Participants with mild cognitive impairment and hearing loss, who would have been expected to perform worse than normative data, were in fact performing as well as cognitively healthy subjects without hearing loss. Visuospatial ability could be targeted when providing rehabilitation for the older adults with hearing loss.
有人提出听力损失可能会导致视觉空间能力的提高。这一论断的证据并不一致,且仅限于对先天性失聪儿童的研究,尽管与年龄相关的听力损失的老年人占听力受损人群的绝大多数。我们评估了有和没有临床显著认知障碍的老年助听器使用者的视觉空间(视觉构建和视觉空间记忆)能力。该研究的主要目的是确定听力损失对视觉空间能力的影响。
招募了75名65岁以上的成年助听器使用者,其中30人认知正常(NC-HA),30人有轻度认知障碍(MCI-HA),15人患有痴呆症(D-HA)。进行了雷-奥斯特里思复杂图形测试(ROCFT)复制、3分钟回忆和30分钟回忆测试,以评估参与者的视觉构建和视觉空间记忆能力。
三个队列在ROCFT复制、3分钟回忆和30分钟回忆方面存在显著差异(<0.005)。与先前公布的标准数据相比,NC-HA在ROCFT复制(<0.001)、即时回忆(<0.001)和延迟回忆(=0.001)方面表现明显更好,而MCI-HA的表现与从人群中得出的预期标准相似(分别为=0.426、=0.611、=0.697),D-HA的表现低于该标准。
虽然当整体认知功能下降时,视觉空间能力往往会下降,但我们发现了与年龄相关的听力损失对视觉空间认知能力有积极影响的提示性证据。原本预计有轻度认知障碍和听力损失的参与者会比标准数据表现更差,但实际上他们的表现与没有听力损失的认知健康受试者一样好。在为有听力损失的老年人提供康复治疗时,可以针对视觉空间能力进行训练。