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Hearing Assessment

QuestionAnswer
Pinna external ear
External canal S-shaped; lined w/ cerumen glands, sebaceous glands, hair follicles
Tympanic membrane eardrum
Cerumen wax; protects eardrum & middle ear
Mastoid proves bony ridge over temporal bone & behind pinna
Epitympanum in middle ear, contains malleus, incus, stapes
Malleus hammer
Eustachian tube pressure equalization & fluid drainage
Semicircular canals maintains balance
Cochlea spiral organ of hearing; contains scala tympani & scala vestibuli
Endolymph location scala media (duct of cochlea)
Perilymph location scala tympani & vestibule
Purpose of lymph allow cochlea & semicircular canals to float
Decibel loudness
Masking hiding sound from one ear to test the other ear
Otitis media middle ear infection/inflammation
Otosclerosis spongy bone formation around middle/inner ear structures; results in low-tone hearing loss
Ototoxic damaging to hearing structures
Presbycusis age-related decrease in hearing acuity
Sensorineural hearing loss from neural defects
Spondee words of 2 syllables with equal stress during pronunciation
Vestibular Functions of ear for sense of balance/position
Organ of corti Receptor end-organ of hearing
Path of sound waves Waves through air -> strike mastoid & movable eardrum -> malleus -> incus -> stapes -> cochlea receptors (transduce vibration into action potentials) -> CN VIII -> brain
Conductive hearing loss result of physical disruption in sound wave transmission
Sensorineural hearing loss result of defective cochlea, CN VIII, or brain; loud noises may result in this
Mixed conductive-sensorineural hearing loss profound hearing loss
Voice test hearing acuity; stand 1-2ft away, whisper statement, ask client to repeat
Watch test high-frequency acuity; hold ticking watch 5” from client
Audioscopy hearing measurement
Tuning fork test hearing acuity
CT reveals structures of ear in great detail; dx acoustic tumors
MRI boney artifacts cannot obscure tissue; greater sensitivity to soft-tissue changes
ABR (auditory brainstem-evoked response) helps dx conductive & sensorineural hearing loss in unreliable pt or pt unable to indicate sound recognition
ENG (Electronystagmography) detects central & peripheral disease of vestibular system by detecting nystagmus
Caloric testing eval inner ear portion of auditory nerve by infusing warmer/cooler water; normal response is vertigo & nystagmus w/in 20-30 sec
Dix-Hallpike test for vertigo detects positional vertigo; assist client to sitting position; quickly reposition to supine with head extending beyond table; burst of nystagmus is a positive result
Audiometry hearing acuity test; assesses frequency, intensity, and threshold
Air-conduction test detects normal hearing and hearing loss
Bone-conduction test differentiates between conduction & sensorineural loss; indicated if hearing loss is detected with air-conduction test
Pure-tone audiometry tones produced by audiometer; performed by air/bone-conduction test
Speech audiometry hearing measured through microphone connected to audiometer; 2 components are speech reception threshold & speech discrimination
Speech reception threshold minimum loudness for client to repeat simple words; spondee commonly used
Speech discrimination detects ability to discriminate among similar sounds/words containing similar sounds
Ability to understand speech Most important measurable aspect of human hearing
Tympanometry Assesses mobility of eardrum & middle ear structures; used to distinguish middle-ear pathological conditions, assessing patency of Eustachian tube, & check for return of middle ear function s/p surgery
Created by: jlee12406
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