Literature DB >> 17684649

Dead regions in the cochlea at high frequencies: implications for the adaptation to hearing aids.

Angela Gordo1, Maria Cecília Martinelli Iório.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: In patients with moderate to severe high-frequency hearing loss, cochlear damage may include "dead regions" where there are no functional inner hair cells and/or associated neurons. AIM: This study examines speech recognition in sensorineural impaired hearing patients with and without cochlear dead regions at high frequencies.
METHODS: a clinical and experimental study was made of thirty patients with sensorineural hearing loss that were classified into two groups: group 1 - included 15 subjects with hearing loss and no dead regions; and group 2 - included 15 subjects with dead regions in the cochlea at high frequencies. Patients undertook word recognition score and speech reception threshold tests, with and without background noise. The speech tests were done with and without hearing aids in two situations: program 1 - broadband amplification (bandwidth 8000 Hz); and program 2 - amplification up to 2560 Hz, without high frequency gain.
RESULTS: For subjects with no dead regions in the cochlea (group 1) performance improved with program 1. For subjects with dead regions in the cochlea (group 2) performance improved with program 2.
CONCLUSIONS: Subjects with no dead regions in the cochlea benefited from high-frequency information. Subjects with dead regions in the cochlea benefited from reduced gain at high frequencies.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17684649      PMCID: PMC9445647          DOI: 10.1016/s1808-8694(15)30072-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Braz J Otorhinolaryngol        ISSN: 1808-8686


INTRODUCTION

In audiology, sloping auditory sensorineural deficiency is the most common type/configuration of hearing loss associated with difficulty in understanding speech in noisy environments. Although hearing aids may increase the available acoustic information, not always a satisfactory improvement in speech recognition is attained. Some patients enjoy little or not benefit from amplification, particularly in cases of sloping hearing loss where a severe grade occurs at high frequencies. An old concept is the relation between absence of benefit from hearing aids and functional reduction and complete loss of inner hair cells and/or neurons in certain regions of the cochlea. No clinical test, however, was done to identify the dead zones in the cochlea. In these regions information generated by vibration of the basilar membrane is not transmitted to the central nervous system. If sufficiently intense, however, a tone with a corresponding frequency to that of the dead zone may be detected through apical or basal transmission of the vibration pattern by other functional regions of the cochlea. The vibration amplitude of the basilar membrane at a distant site will be lower than the dead zone amplitude. Broad band noise may thus mask that tone much more effectively than expected, as noise needs only to eliminate the response coming from the remote site. If the threshold needed to detect a tone in the presence of broad band noise is higher than that of the normal threshold, this alteration may indicate lack of inner hair cells and/or adjacent neurons, with a typical frequency that corresponds to the tone frequency, in other words, a dead zone. A few studies have related the difficulty that hearing loss imposes on speech recognition to the need for hearing speech at high sound pressure levels; these levels, however, may reduce the analytical capability of the normal cochlea. As hearing loss increases, certain frequencies do not support or even reduce the available information at other frequencies. Less amplification should therefore be prescribed for frequencies at with auditory thresholds are increased.2, 5 Auditory resolution is the ability that inner ear structures and their associated neural systems have of generating patterns of neural activity that reflect spectral and time differences between sound information. The auditory nerve is organized, as is the basilar membrane: typically high frequency fibers originate from hair cells of the base of the cochlea, while low frequency fibers are at the apex of the cochlea. Fibers in the basal region respond synchronically to the presentation of a stimulus. Fibers in the apex are activated later (2 to 4ms later). Those that are activated simultaneously will contribute the most to the action potential of the whole nerve. Consequently this potential reflects mainly the response of high frequency fibers. Other authors4 have proposed a clinical test to identify dead zones of the cochlea; this test is the threshold equalizing noise (TEN), which compares auditory thresholds investigated with and without ipsilateral masking. The TEN noise level has a spectrum that was elaborated to obtain equally masked thresholds at all frequencies, (125 Hz to 15000 Hz), and is expressed as ERB (Equivalent Rectangular Bandwidth), which refers to the bandwidth of the auditory filter. Normal listeners have a small variation (2 dB to 3 dB) between masked thresholds and noise levels. In patients with sensorineural hearing loss, dead zones of the cochlea are found when masked thresholds are at least 10 dB over absolute thresholds and 10 dB over the noise level. The results are confirmed by the measurement of psychophysical tuning curves. When the TEN test is positive, the peak of the tuning curve is displaced relative to the signal frequency. The authors emphasize that if dead zones are present, it may be useful to amplify a frequency range slightly above the dead zone; the reason being that amplification should aim at where hair cells can make use of it. The effectiveness of hearing for intelligibility is affected by the sound pressure level of the signal (distortion level), the degree of hearing loss, the frequencies at which it takes place, and the sound information processing capability. As thresholds increase, the auditory efficiency decreases; this effect is amplified in high frequency hearing loss. The practical implication of this concept for hearing aid adaptation is that increased amplification should be applied where thresholds are less affected. Based on these thoughts, the aim of this study was to verify the benefit of high frequency amplification for speech recognition in patients with sloping sensorineural hearing loss with or with no dead zones in the cochlea.

METHODS

The procedures used in this study were described to the Research Ethics Committee and approved under code number 0235/04. Participants signed a free informed consent form containing the necessary information before undergoing the tests. We assessed 30 subjects (14 women and 16 men) with sloping, bilateral, and symmetrical sensorineural hearing loss. Identification of dead zones of the cochlea was done using the TEN(NA) test,6 2004 version. Two groups were defined based on these results: group 1 - 15 subjects with no dead zones of the cochlea, and group 2 - 15 subjects with dead zones of the cochlea at high frequencies. Tables 1 and 2 show the distribution of the sample population including gender, age, complaint, duration of the complaint, and use of hearing aids (if a user for how long or if in the selection/adaptation process) for group 1 and 2.
Table 1

Distribution of the sample population as to gender, age, complaint, duration of complaint, and use of hearing aids in group 1.

SexAgeComplaintDurationHearing aids
M45Sudden hearing loss40 years8 months
F49Listens but does not understand speech3 yearsAdapting
M49Progressive hearing loss / tinnitus6 years1 year
M58Progressive hearing loss / tinnitus3 yearsAdapting
M66Progressive hearing loss / tinnitus10 years1 year
M68Progressive hearing loss6 years6 years
M69Progressive hearing loss2 years1 month
M71Progressive hearing loss / tinnitus6 yearsAdapting
F72Progressive hearing loss5 yearsAdapting
M73Progressive hearing loss3 yearsAdapting
M74Does not understand speech20 years3 months
F75Progressive hearing loss10 years3 months
M75Progressive hearing loss22 years4 months
F76Progressive hearing loss2 years1 month
M83Does not understand speech / tinnitus20 years1 year
Table 2

Distribution of the sample population as to gender, age, complaint, duration of complaint, and use of hearing aids in group 2.

SexAgeComplaintDurationHearing aids
F19Would like to hear better16 years1 year
F24Does not understand speech / tinnitus12 yearsAdapting
F26Does not understand speech6 yearsAdapting
F34Does not understand speech10 yearsAdapting
M35Does not hear/discomfort for loud sounds10yearsAdapting
F36Does not understand speech12 years9 months
F43Progressive hearing loss / tinnitus4 years1 mês
M50Constant tinnitus3 years4 months
M54Does not hear well / tinnitus5 yearsAdapting
M57Does not hear well / tinnitus10 yearsAdapting
M64Progressive hearing loss / tinnitus20 yearsAdapting
F69Progressive hearing loss / tinnitus8 years2 months
F73Does not understand speech / tinnitus15 yearsAdapting
F75Does not understand speech / tinnitus30 years1 month
F75Does not hear well / does not understand speech20 years2 years
Distribution of the sample population as to gender, age, complaint, duration of complaint, and use of hearing aids in group 1. Distribution of the sample population as to gender, age, complaint, duration of complaint, and use of hearing aids in group 2. The TEN test was applied using a two channel audiometer to control separately the stimulus (pure tone) and noise. The audiometer was coupled to a CD player. Auditory thresholds were measured in 2 dB intervals at 500, 750, 1000, 1500, 2000, 3000, and 4000 Hz in each ear separately, using TDH49 earphones, initially without masking, followed by an ipsilateral TEN noise at 70 dB NA/ERB. If this level was not sufficient to mask the absolute threshold, we would gradually increase the intensity up to 85 dB NA/ERB (maximum noise level tolerated by our patients). When the masked threshold was 10 dB or more over the absolute threshold and the noise level, we would give the result as suggesting dead zones for the tested frequency. We then proceeded with speech recognition tests in quite and with background noise, presenting the stimuli in an acoustic room, always using the same loudspeaker that the patient sat facing at a distance of 1 meter and azimuth 0º. We used a digital Siemens Signia HdO+ behind the-ear hearing aid with eight independently programmable channels for different frequency ranges to observe performance according to the amplified signal. Adaptation of hearing aids was binaural in all subjects. There were two programs: program 1 was amplification at a wide range of low frequencies (between 100 Hz and 8000 Hz), and program 2 had no gain at high frequencies (over 2560 Hz). The cut-off frequency for program 2 was approximately 2000 Hz, which was selected based on research that reports benefits from amplification of 1.7 times the dead zone limit frequency (roughly one octave higher). Although this measurement was not done precisely in our study, results were positive for dead zones starting between 1000 and 1500 Hz in most cases. The speech material used for the Percentage Index of Speech Recognition (PISR) survey was a list of 25 phonetically balanced monosyllables recorded in four difference sequences. The PISR was assessed in quite and with background speech noise. With no hearing aids, speech intensity was set as the most comfortable level reported by patients. With hearing aids, speech and noise were set at 65 dB A. We then investigated the Sentence Recognition Threshold in quiet (SRTQ) and in the presence of background noise (SRTN) using five lists containing 10 phonetically balanced sentences.9 For the SRTQ test we presented the first sentence using the best ear speech reception threshold (obtained by earphones). Noise was set at 65 dB A for the SRTN test, and the first sentence was presented always in a zero signal-to-noise ratio. Both tests (PISR and SRTQ/N) were investigated under three different conditions: unaided, aided using program 1, and aided using program 2; the sequence of procedures and the selected lists were alternated at each presentation. We then applied the Abbreviated Profile of Hearing Aid Benefit (APHAB) questionnaire to assess communication difficulties in daily situations. This questionnaire includes 24 items on three communication subscales related to the acoustic environment and one subscale on discomfort for intense sounds, namely: ease of communication, reverberation, background noise and aversiveness of sounds. As not all subjects used hearing aids, we used only the responses for unaided performance. Participants chose the option for each item that came closest to their everyday experience: A-always (99%); B-almost always (87%); C-generally (75%); D-half-the-time (50%); E-occasionally (25%); F-seldom (12%); G-never (1%). Results were quantified to reach a score for each subscale. We used non-parametric comparison tests to analyze our results statistically. Since the sample was relatively small, our significance level was set at 0.07 (7%). Masked thresholds were never over 10 dB above the noise level (from 70 to 85 dB NA/ERB) in all patients; the maximum difference between them was 6 dB NA. Generally only one noise level (70 dB NA/ERB) was enough for the TEN(NA) test. When the audiometric threshold was above 60 dB at a specific frequency, we used 10 dB over this threshold to define the minimum masking level. When masked auditory thresholds obtained by TEN(NA) testing of group 2 exceeded one or more of the absolute thresholds and the noise level by 10 dB, we considered the result as positive for dead zones of the cochlea at high frequencies. We used two or three noise levels due to the degree of hearing loss at these frequencies. Various patients had a 10 dB or more change compared to the absolute threshold when the noise level was below this threshold, where masking would theoretically be insufficient to change the threshold. In subjects with no dead zones of the cochlea we found that the PISR in quiet and in the presence of background noise improved significantly when using program 1 compared to the unaided and aided conditions of program 2. When dead zones of the cochlea were present we found that the PISR in quiet and in the presence of background noise improved significantly when using programs 1 and 2 in unaided conditions, and that program 2 showed significantly improved results compared to program 1. SRTQ was significantly improved in group 1 when using program 1 in unaided condition and to program 2. In the presence of background noise (SRTN) we can say that there was a trend towards a difference between both programs, as the statistical analysis revealed that the p-value was close to the acceptable limit. There were no significant differences between program 2 unaided and aided results. SRTQ and SRTN were significantly improved in group 2 when using program 2 and unaided conditions and when using program 1 and aided conditions. There was a significant difference between groups only in environments that favored communication; in this condition the most significant difficulty was found in group 2.

DISCUSSION

The degree of high frequency hearing loss and the percentage index of speech recognition already suggested significant differences between groups 1 and 2 before we identified dead zones of the cochlea. We may say that a negative result for dead zones of the cochlea corresponded to the expected pattern in group 1, due to the audiometric sloping configuration but with no threshold differences over 50 dB obtained in successive octaves of tested frequencies, and the absence of thresholds over 90 dB NA at high frequencies (Table 3). We found a positive result for dead zones at high frequencies over 1500 Hz in group 2 in most cases (Table 4). Many patients reported hearing a different sound, similar to a hiss, when the pure tone frequency was associated with the dead zone.
Table 3

Auditory thresholds (dB NA) and mean differences between masked thresholds and the noise level in group 1.

Frequencies (kHz)
Subjects0.50.7511.5234
1RE32283436365660
LE32323034384458
2RE24263240384660
LE52525060565866
3RE18222028605854
LE20202038566252
4RE16202026365060
LE24242650465254
5RE18263046485460
LE26263244485058
6RE12142256585260
LE10141648505054
7RE1281036505454
LE18243636545460
8RE16202456605870
LE16202450545664
9RE24345050505470
LE28324242424860
10RE24223238445860
LE14121834346054
11RE32383850505866
LE12243056506280
12RE26262428365264
LE24303236405052
13RE6101838525456
LE10465050525656
14RE28283244405464
LE30303232384252
15RE1814842545460
LE38285254526464
MeanRE4.34.34.95.75.75.33.8
LE2.03.24.15.25.15.04.5

Key: RE - right ear; LE - left ear

Table 4

Auditory thresholds (dB NA) and mean differences between masked thresholds and the noise level in group 2.

Frequencies (kHz)
Subjects0.50.7511.5234
1RE6546464*66*ARAR
LE8526466*86*ARAR
2RE6285264*66*64*66*
LE8144670*68*64*64*
3RE221882*82*90*ARAR
LE202674*82*80*84*82*
4RE42526086*82*80*86*
LE34525480*82*76*82*
5RE447278*78*78*94*AR
LE384874*ARAR96*AR
6RE888698*94*94*90*80*
LE324272*92*92*ARAR
7RE4250628292*ARAR
LE60626880*86*82*AR
8RE48143662*58*58*
LE4121658*60*58*56*
9RE46567488*ARARAR
LE606888*ARARARAR
10RE506886*ARARARAR
LE4662687480*8090*
11RE2620184458*98*90*
LE10810325682*AR
12RE466470*70*84*74*92*
LE467074*84*82*ARAR
13RE42667080*ARARAR
LE506272*96*ARARAR
14RE18283040*52*64*68*
LE20182830*38*62*64*
15RE54626878*84*96*94*
LE48566672*86*86*84*
MeanRE3.92.66.413.215.118.519.5
LE3.94.68.513.214.817.219.5

Key: RE - right ear; LE - left ear; AR - absence of response at the maximum pure tone intensity (102 dB NA).

presence of dead zone of the cochlea at the frequency tested.

Auditory thresholds (dB NA) and mean differences between masked thresholds and the noise level in group 1. Key: RE - right ear; LE - left ear Auditory thresholds (dB NA) and mean differences between masked thresholds and the noise level in group 2. Key: RE - right ear; LE - left ear; AR - absence of response at the maximum pure tone intensity (102 dB NA). presence of dead zone of the cochlea at the frequency tested. The percentage index of speech recognition in group 1 showed a significant improvement when using hearing aids with program 1 (sound amplification in a wide frequency range from 100 Hz to 8000 Hz) compared to program 2 (restricted amplification from 100 Hz to 2560 Hz), both in quiet and in the presence of background noise (Figure 1). Thus, if there are no dead zones of the cochlea, high frequency information effectively contributes to speech intelligibility.5, 7, 13, 14
Figure 1

Chart showing the percentage index of speech recognition in quiet and with background noise in group 1.

Chart showing the percentage index of speech recognition in quiet and with background noise in group 1. The percentage index of speech recognition in group 2 was significantly improved by using hearing aids with programs 1 and 2 compared to the unaided condition, both in quiet and in the presence of background noise (Figure 2), although the highest benefit was seen with program 2. Sound amplification in a restricted frequency range - with a lower gain at frequencies in which hearing loss is most severe - favored information use where audibility is useful.2, 5, 14, 15
Figure 2

Chart showing the percentage index of speech recognition in quiet and with background noise in group 2.

Chart showing the percentage index of speech recognition in quiet and with background noise in group 2. We may assume that patients with dead zones of the cochlea at high frequencies are used to a perception of filtered speech, as their hearing would operate as a low-pass filter. This could explain the benefit difference between each program for groups 1 and 2. Subjects with no dead zones, that effectively use high frequency information, are more affected by removal of these high frequencies. Comparing both programs, we observed that group 2 subjects reported increased clarity of sound and absence of hissing with program 2. We believe that the presence of dead zones at high frequencies reduce sound distortion by not amplifying those frequencies. Vibration generated in a dead zone is detected by another region; little useful information, therefore, is transmitted from the affected site. Furthermore, when the typical frequency of a region is different from that of the stimulus, detection of intense sound corresponding to these regions is altered. Group 1 subjects performed better in the sentence recognition threshold test in quiet and in the presence of background noise when using program 1 compared to program 2 (Figure 3). There was no significant performance difference in program 2 with or without hearing aids in the presence of background noise; in this condition, program 2 offered practically no benefit. Once again, these results may be associated with the use of high frequency information to attain speech intelligibility.
Figure 3

Chart showing the sentence recognition threshold in quiet (SRTQ) and with background noise (SRTN) in group 1.

Chart showing the sentence recognition threshold in quiet (SRTQ) and with background noise (SRTN) in group 1. Sentence recognition thresholds in quiet and in the presence of background noise (Figure 4) for group 2 benefited from both programs, where benefits from program 2 were more significant than those from program 1. The etiology and the time during which adequate auditory stimuli at high frequencies were absent should be taken into account when using high frequency amplification for conditions of marked hearing loss at these frequencies. Ten subjects with dead zones (66.7% of group 2) had a history of hearing loss for ten years or more, a relatively long period of absent auditory stimuli, which may have contributed to improved results with amplification of a reduced frequency range.
Figure 4

Chart showing the sentence recognition threshold in quiet (SRTQ) and with background noise (SRTN) in group 2.

Chart showing the sentence recognition threshold in quiet (SRTQ) and with background noise (SRTN) in group 2. The APHAB questionnaire (Figure 5), used to compare both groups, revealed that there was a significant difference between groups only in the ease of communication environment, where group 2 had more communication difficulties. This result confirms the less favorable performance of group 2 in speech tests. This performance is related to the severity of hearing loss and the presence of dead zones of the cochlea.
Figure 5

Chart showing the communication difficulty (%) in various sound environments and aversiveness to sounds according to the APHAB questionnaire in groups 1 and 2.

Chart showing the communication difficulty (%) in various sound environments and aversiveness to sounds according to the APHAB questionnaire in groups 1 and 2. Over half of group 2 subjects were going through hearing aid selection procedures just by taking part of this study, as previous adaptation attempts had been unsuccessful. In another paper the superior percentage index of speech recognition in patients with no dead zones of the cochlea was related to a higher acceptance rate of hearing aids (94.1%). In the presence of dead zones the acceptance rate was 21.4%. During the tests patients in group 2 reported improved sound quality with program 2, and that they wished to attempt adaptation once again. Observing the region in which auditory thresholds were preserved most in group 2, we could question whether amplification of sounds corresponding to this area could truly benefit these patients. We know that there is also loss of low frequency phase/synchronization components together with loss of high frequency information.3, 17 Thus, gain at these frequencies is very important. We believe that the strategy of limiting sound amplification in affected areas where amplification would offer little benefit is the most adequate choice for the auditory rehabilitation of patients with dead zones of the cochlea.

CONCLUSION

Based on a critical analysis of our results, we reached the following conclusions: In the absence of dead zones of the cochlea, improved speech recognition performance is reached with amplification over a wide frequency range. In the presence of dead zones of the cochlea at high frequencies, sound amplification of a restricted frequency range, avoiding gain at high frequencies, leads to the best speech recognition performance.
  13 in total

1.  Inter-relationship between different psychoacoustic measures assumed to be related to the cochlear active mechanism.

Authors:  B C Moore; D A Vickers; C J Plack; A J Oxenham
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  1999-11       Impact factor: 1.840

2.  Recognition of low-pass-filtered consonants in noise with normal and impaired high-frequency hearing.

Authors:  Amy R Horwitz; Judy R Dubno; Jayne B Ahlstrom
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 1.840

3.  Effects of low-pass filtering on the intelligibility of speech in quiet for people with and without dead regions at high frequencies.

Authors:  D A Vickers; B C Moore; T Baer
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 1.840

4.  A test for the diagnosis of dead regions in the cochlea.

Authors:  B C Moore; M Huss; D A Vickers; B R Glasberg; J I Alcántara
Journal:  Br J Audiol       Date:  2000-08

5.  Dead regions in the cochlea: implications for speech recognition and applicability of articulation index theory.

Authors:  Martin D Vestergaard
Journal:  Int J Audiol       Date:  2003-07       Impact factor: 2.117

Review 6.  Dead regions in the cochlea: conceptual foundations, diagnosis, and clinical applications.

Authors:  Brian C J Moore
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 3.570

7.  Maximizing effective audibility in hearing aid fitting.

Authors:  T Y Ching; H Dillon; R Katsch; D Byrne
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  2001-06       Impact factor: 3.570

8.  Dead regions in the cochlea: diagnosis, perceptual consequences, and implications for the fitting of hearing AIDS.

Authors:  B C Moore
Journal:  Trends Amplif       Date:  2001-03

9.  Effects of low pass filtering on the intelligibility of speech in noise for people with and without dead regions at high frequencies.

Authors:  Thomas Baer; Brian C J Moore; Karolina Kluk
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 1.840

10.  High-frequency audibility: benefits for hearing-impaired listeners.

Authors:  C A Hogan; C W Turner
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  1998-07       Impact factor: 1.840

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  3 in total

1.  Implications of high-frequency cochlear dead regions for fitting hearing aids to adults with mild to moderately severe hearing loss.

Authors:  Robyn M Cox; Jani A Johnson; Genevieve C Alexander
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  2012 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.570

2.  Cochlear dead regions in typical hearing aid candidates: prevalence and implications for use of high-frequency speech cues.

Authors:  Robyn M Cox; Genevieve C Alexander; Jani Johnson; Izel Rivera
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  2011 May-Jun       Impact factor: 3.570

3.  Cochlear dead regions constrain the benefit of combining acoustic stimulation with electric stimulation.

Authors:  Ting Zhang; Michael F Dorman; Rene Gifford; Brian C J Moore
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  2014 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 3.570

  3 in total

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