| Literature DB >> 31496946 |
Zbyněk Bureš1,2, Oliver Profant1,3, Veronika Svobodová1,4, Diana Tóthová1,4, Václav Vencovský1,5, Josef Syka1.
Abstract
Deteriorated speech comprehension is a common manifestation of the age-related decline of auditory functions (presbycusis). It could be assumed that when presbycusis is accompanied by tinnitus, general hearing functions, and particularly comprehension of speech in quiet and speech in noise (SIN), will be significantly affected. In this study, speech comprehension ability and other parameters of auditory function were assessed in elderly subjects with (T, n = 25) and without (NT, n = 26) tinnitus, aiming for examination of both peripheral and central auditory processing. Apart from high-frequency audiograms in quiet and in background noise, speech recognition thresholds in silence or in competitive babble noise, and the ability to understand temporally gated speech (GS), we measured also sensitivity to frequency modulation (FM) and interaural delay, gap detection thresholds (GDT), or the difference limens of intensity. The results show that in elderly participants matched by age (mean ages around 68 years), cognitive status (median MoCA scores around 27), and hearing thresholds [median pure-tone averages (PTA) around 16 dB hearing loss (HL)], tinnitus per se has little influence on speech comprehension. The tinnitus patients also show similar GDT, sensitivity to interaural intensity difference, and sensitivity to FM as the NT subjects. Despite these similarities, nevertheless, significant differences in auditory processing have been found in the tinnitus participants: a worse ability to detect tones in noise, a higher sensitivity to intensity changes, and a higher sensitivity to interaural time differences. Additional correlation analyses further revealed that speech comprehension in the T subjects is dependent on the sensitivity to temporal modulation and interaural time delay (ITD), while these correlations are weak and non-significant in the NT subjects. Therefore, despite similarities in average speech comprehension and several other parameters of auditory function, elderly people with tinnitus exhibit different auditory processing, particularly at a suprathreshold level. The results also suggest that speech comprehension ability of elderly tinnitus patients relies more on temporal features of the sound stimuli, especially under difficult conditions, compared to elderly people without tinnitus.Entities:
Keywords: aging; auditory temporal processing; hearing; speech recognition; tinnitus
Year: 2019 PMID: 31496946 PMCID: PMC6713070 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2019.00219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1Average pure-tone audiograms of the subjects with (T) and without (NT) tinnitus. Mean ± SEM.
Figure 2Pure-tone averages (PTA) computed for audiograms in quiet and in white noise: PTA (A), wide-range pure-tone average (PTAw; B), PTA in white noise (C), PTAw in white noise (D). Medians and IQR. Statistically significant difference denoted with asterisks (Wilcoxon rank-sum tests; *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01).
Figure 3Speech comprehension: speech recognition threshold in quiet (A), speech in babble noise (B), gated speech (GS; C). Medians and IQR.
Figure 4Sensitivity to temporal parameters: interaural time delay (ITD) sensitivity (A), sensitivity to frequency modulation (FM; B), gap detection threshold (GDT; C). Medians and IQR. Statistically significant difference denoted with asterisk (Wilcoxon rank-sum tests; *p < 0.05).
Figure 5Difference limen for intensity (DLI) of tone in noise (A), DLI of noise (B), sensitivity to interaural level difference (ILD; C). Medians and IQR. Statistically significant difference denoted with asterisks (Wilcoxon rank-sum tests; *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01).
Correlations of speech comprehension ability with other audiometric parameters in the T and NT groups.
| PTA | PTAw | GDT | FM | ITD | MoCA | THI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T subjects | SRS | |||||||
| SIN | ||||||||
| GS | ||||||||
| NT subjects | SRS | N/A | ||||||
| SIN | | | N/A | ||||||
| GS | N/A |
Spearman correlation coefficients (.
Comparison of NT participants with tinnitus patients having Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI) scores worse than “slight” (T2 group).
| Parameter | NT (median|IQR) | T2 (median|IQR) | Cohen’s | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTA (dB HL) | 15.0|16.1 | 28.4|21.3 | >0.05 | 0.56 |
| PTAw (dB HL) | 23.1|12.7 | 36.6|18.8 | >0.05 | 0.43 |
| SRS (dB SPL) | 33.5|8.0 | 41.0|13.0 | >0.05 | 0.53 |
| SIN (dB SPL)/ | 70.8|2.4/ | 68.5|4.1/ | >0.05 | 0.12 |
| SIN SNR (dB) | −5.8|2.4 | −3.5|4.1 | ||
| GS (%) | 56.0|5.5 | 58.5|12.25 | >0.05 | 0.51 |
| GDT (ms) | 4.8|2.0 | 6.95|1.05 | >0.05 | 0.54 |