Information About Deafness
General Facts
- Of 236 million people in this country
over the age of 3, about 20 million have
some degree hearing loss.
- One infant in 22 is born
with, or soon develops, a hearing
loss.
- Hearing
impairment that starts in childhood
or later may be caused by:
- Genes
- Diseases, especially in young children
(German
measles, meningitis, cytomegalovirus)
- Noise (jet engines,
industrial noises, loud
music, rifle fire)
- Drugs (certain antibiotics
and diuretics)
- Nearly 5 million cannot hear
normal speech.
- Otitis
media (middle ear
infection), the
most common cause of
hearing loss,
costs an estimated
$1 billion a year.
- Communication
disorders --
including disorders
of speech
and language
as well
as of
hearing --
carry an
estimated $30
billion a
year price
tag in
special education
costs, medical
costs, and
lost productivity.
The
Human Factor
Helen Keller felt her hearing loss
was more devastating than her blindness because
it isolated her from
people rather than from things.
For older adults, loss of hearing may be just one
of many losses to endure, and the isolation can
be particularly devastating.
Hearing aids don't necessarily "fix it";
lip-reading is difficult to learn and not precise;
sign language is even more difficult to learn and
not likely to be known by friends and family.
For the very young, hearing impairment and deafness
can interfere with one of the major tasks for which
the child's brain is primed: learning language.
We know that language is more easily learned before
the age of five than later; that children who are
deaf have a harder time learning a spoken language;
and that language acquisition is necessary for
most other learning.
What We Know Now and How
It Helps
- We can now identify hearing impairments at
birth.
- We can distinguish between hair cell and nerve
deafness (and therefore fit appropriate
hearing aids).
- Some of today's hearing aids are normally
able to compensate for outer
hair cell loss.
- We can identify the genetic basis of
some hearing impairments.
- Today's
cochlear prosthesis, or implant
-- an electronic substitute
for damaged
or lost
hair-- cells is
more sophisticated
than the earlier versions and is now approved
for
both children
and adults for
whom hearing aids
are useless.
Articles
"Auditory neuropathy: What is it and what can
we do about it?"
Linda J. Hood, PhD
Part 1 I Part 2 "An Introduction to Hearing Loss and its Impact
on Communication"
Charles I. Berlin, PhD
"Hearing Loss
in newborns and infants: Deafness vs. Auditory
Neuropathy"
Charles I. Berlin, PhD
"As I Hear It:
Fitting the Patient's Physiology Instead of the
Audiogram"
Charles I. Berlin, PhD
"Managing Patients with Auditory Neuropathy/Auditory
Dys-synchrony"
Charles I. Berlin, PhD
Teaching Materials
on Hearing Physiology
- Dick Bobbin's Lecture
- Dick Bobbin's Auditory
- Physiology
Text
- Neurotransmission in the Cochlea
- Pentobarbital on MOC induced suppression of
DPOAEs
Links to Other Web Sites on Deafness
Universite Montpellier, France, Promenade autour
de la cochlee
http://www.iurc.montp.inserm.fr/cric51/audition/english/
Johnathan Ashmore's laboratory on hair cell physiology
http://www.physiol.ucl.ac.uk/ashmore/
Johns Hopkins' site with a bias towards biomedical
engineering
http://www.bme.jhu.edu/labs/chb/
The Unversity of Wisconsin's site on cochlear function
and motion of the organ of Corti
http://www.neurophys.wisc.edu/
House Ear Clinic
http://www.hei.org/
Specializing in Information ior the Deaf and Hard
of Hearing
http://www.listen-up.org/
A listserve
of parents whose children have auditory neuropathy
http://groups.yahoo.com/subscribe/auditoryneuropathy
More
updates on auditory neuropathy/dys-synchrony
from a parent
http://auditoryneuropathy.tripod.com/ANindex.html
National
Cued Speech Association
http://www.cuedspeech.org/
Demo of what speech might
sound like to an auditory neuropathy
patient
http://www.ucihs.uci.edu/com/hesp/newversion/procSim/simulations.htm
Alexnader Graham Bell Association
for the Deaf and Hard
of Hearing
http://www.agbell.org/
American Academy
of Audiology
http://www.audiology.org/index.php
Association
for
Research in Otolaryngology
http://www.aro.org/
American
Speech and
Hearing Association
http://www.asha.org/default.htm
Otoacoustic Emissions
http://www.otoemissions.org/
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