| Literature DB >> 25538543 |
Amir Lahav1, Erika Skoe2.
Abstract
The intrauterine environment allows the fetus to begin hearing low-frequency sounds in a protected fashion, ensuring initial optimal development of the peripheral and central auditory system. However, the auditory nursery provided by the womb vanishes once the preterm newborn enters the high-frequency (HF) noisy environment of the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). The present article draws a concerning line between auditory system development and HF noise in the NICU, which we argue is not necessarily conducive to fostering this development. Overexposure to HF noise during critical periods disrupts the functional organization of auditory cortical circuits. As a result, we theorize that the ability to tune out noise and extract acoustic information in a noisy environment may be impaired, leading to increased risks for a variety of auditory, language, and attention disorders. Additionally, HF noise in the NICU often masks human speech sounds, further limiting quality exposure to linguistic stimuli. Understanding the impact of the sound environment on the developing auditory system is an important first step in meeting the developmental demands of preterm newborns undergoing intensive care.Entities:
Keywords: NICU; auditory development; high frequency; noise exposure; preterm infants
Year: 2014 PMID: 25538543 PMCID: PMC4256984 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2014.00381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
An acoustic gap between the NICU and the womb environments.
| Bone conduction | Air conduction | |
| Fluid | Air | |
| Attenuation provided by maternal tissue and fluids | Direct exposure to sound source | |
| Primarily low frequency (<500 Hz) | Broad spectrum | |
| Restricted daily exposure to noise | Excessive daily exposure to noise (e.g., alarms, white noise, and multi-talker babble) | |
| Maternal vocalizations, biological sounds (e.g., heartbeat, digestive noises) | Electronic, unnatural, non-biological sounds | |
| High-quality stimuli, primarily from mother | Poor quality stimuli during non-visiting hours, primarily from multi-talker babble | |
| Rhythmic, periodic, organized, predictable (e.g., heartbeat) | Aperiodic (e.g., white noise), unorganized, unpredictable (e.g., alarms) |
Figure 1An illustration of the cochlea and its tonotopic development across the frequency spectrum. High-frequency sounds maximally stimulate the base of the cochlea, whereas low-frequency sounds maximally stimulate the apex. Whereas the fetus is primarily exposed to sound frequencies below 500 Hz (green shade), preterm newborns are exposed to the entire frequency spectrum (green, orange, and red shades), coming from various electronic sounds in the NICU environment.