Huber Maria, Reuter Lisa, Weitgasser Lennart, Pletzer Belinda, Rösch Sebastian, Illg Angelika
Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria.
Clinic for Otorhinolaryngology, Medical University of Hannover, Hannover, Germany.
Front Neurol. 2023 Oct 13;14:1272210. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2023.1272210. eCollection 2023.
Hearing loss in old age is associated with cognitive decline and with depression. Our study aimed to investigate the relationship between hearing loss, cognitive decline, and secondary depressive symptoms in a sample of younger and older cochlear implant candidates with profound to severe hearing loss.
This study is part of a larger cohort study designated to provide information on baseline data before CI. Sixty-one cochlear implant candidates with hearing loss from adulthood onwards (>18 years) were enrolled in this study. All had symmetrical sensorineural hearing loss in both ears (four-frequency hearing threshold difference of no more than 20 dB, PTA). Individuals with primary affective disorders, psychosis, below-average intelligence, poor German language skills, visual impairment, and a medical diagnosis with potential impact on cognition (e.g., neurodegenerative diseases,) were excluded. Four-frequency hearing thresholds (dB, PTA, better ear) were collected. Using the Abbreviated Profile of Hearing Aid Benefit, we assessed subjective hearing in noise. Clinical and subclinical depressive symptoms were assessed with the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI II). Cognitive status was assessed with a neurocognitive test battery.
Our findings revealed a significant negative association between subjective hearing in noise (APHAB subscale "Background Noise") and BDII. However, we did not observe any link between hearing thresholds, depression, and cognition. Additionally, no differences emerged between younger (25-54 years) and older subjects (55-75 years). Unexpectedly, further unplanned analyses unveiled correlations between subjective hearing in quiet environments (APHAB) and cognitive performance [phonemic fluency (Regensburg Word Fluency), cognitive flexibility (TMTB), and nonverbal episodic memory (Nonverbal Learning Test), as well as subjective hearing of aversive/loud sounds (APHAB)], cognitive performance [semantic word fluency (RWT), and inhibition (Go/Nogo) and depression]. Duration of hearing loss and speech recognition at quiet (Freiburg Monosyllables) were not related to depression and cognitive performance.
Impact of hearing loss on mood and cognition appears to be independent, suggesting a relationship with distinct aspects of hearing loss. These results underscore the importance of considering not only conventional audiometric measures like hearing thresholds but also variables related to hearing abilities during verbal communication in everyday life, both in quiet and noisy settings.
老年听力损失与认知能力下降及抑郁症有关。我们的研究旨在调查在年龄较大和较小的重度至极重度听力损失的人工耳蜗植入候选者样本中,听力损失、认知能力下降和继发性抑郁症状之间的关系。
本研究是一项更大的队列研究的一部分,该队列研究旨在提供人工耳蜗植入术前的基线数据信息。本研究纳入了61名成年后(>18岁)患有听力损失的人工耳蜗植入候选者。所有患者双耳均为对称性感音神经性听力损失(四个频率听力阈值差不超过20dB,纯音平均听阈)。排除患有原发性情感障碍、精神病、智力低于平均水平、德语语言能力差、视力障碍以及有对认知有潜在影响的医学诊断(如神经退行性疾病)的个体。收集四个频率的听力阈值(dB,纯音平均听阈,较好耳)。使用助听器效益简表,我们评估了噪声环境下的主观听力。使用贝克抑郁量表(BDI II)评估临床和亚临床抑郁症状。使用一套神经认知测试评估认知状态。
我们的研究结果显示,噪声环境下的主观听力(APHAB子量表“背景噪声”)与BDII之间存在显著的负相关。然而,我们没有观察到听力阈值、抑郁和认知之间的任何联系。此外,年龄较小(25 - 54岁)和年龄较大(55 - 75岁)的受试者之间没有差异。出乎意料的是,进一步的非计划分析揭示了安静环境下的主观听力(APHAB)与认知表现[音素流畅性(雷根斯堡单词流畅性)、认知灵活性(TMTB)和非言语情景记忆(非言语学习测试)]以及厌恶/大声声音的主观听力(APHAB)、认知表现[语义单词流畅性(RWT)和抑制(Go/NoGo)]和抑郁之间的相关性。听力损失的持续时间和安静环境下的言语识别(弗莱堡单音节词)与抑郁和认知表现无关。
听力损失对情绪和认知的影响似乎是独立的,这表明与听力损失的不同方面有关。这些结果强调了不仅要考虑像听力阈值这样的传统听力测量指标,还要考虑日常生活中言语交流过程中与听力能力相关的变量的重要性,无论是在安静还是嘈杂的环境中。