ENT
Pediatric Auditory Screening
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Pediatric Auditory Screening
, Pediatric Hearing Screening
See Also
Newborn Hearing Screening
Language Delay
Epidemiology
Incidence
sensorineural
Hearing
deficiency
Newborns: 1-5 per 1000 births
Age 24 Months: 1 per 25 children (20-50 decibel loss)
Identify
Hearing Loss
prior to age 6 months old
Significant benefit in language development
Causes
Infants (Sensorineural
Hearing Deficit
)
No risk factors in 50% of infants
Family History
In utero infection (CMV,
Rubella
)
Low birth weight (<1500 g)
Hyperbilirubinemia
(exchange levels)
Low
APGAR Score
s (<5 at 1 min, <6 at 5 min)
Persistent
Pulmonary Hypertension
Head Injury
causing loss of consciousness
Bacterial Meningitis
Ototoxic Medication
s
Aminoglycoside
s (potentiated by
Loop Diuretic
s)
Chemotherapeutic agents
Causes
Older children (Conductive
Hearing Deficit
)
Otitis Media with Effusion
(Most common)
Occlusive foreign body
Cholesteatoma
Ossicle disruption
Evaluation
Screening
Timing
Perform at birth and ages 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11 to 14, 15 to 17, and 18 to 21 years
Formal
Hearing Testing
if suspicion for
Language Delay
Infants
Evoked
Otoacoustic Emission
s (EOAE)
Sensitivity 50-100%,
Specificity
82%
Easily performed
Cost: inexpensive ($1 per exam)
Auditory
Brainstem
Evoked Responses (ABR)
Sensitivity 94%,
Specificity
89%
Cost: $30 per exam
Requires EEG type electrode
Response to auditory stimulation
Pre-school (Ages 3-5 years)
Pure tone
Audiometry
Fails if >20 decibel loss at any frequency
Acoustic immittance testing (
Tympanometry
)
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