| Literature DB >> 31513582 |
Gouwa Dawood1, Daleen Klop1, Elrietha Olivier1, Haley Elliott1, Mershen Pillay2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Auditory processing disorders can negatively affect academic performance in children. They can result from a number of aetiologies, including the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Although studies in paediatrics are limited, research suggests that HIV-infected children display poorer auditory processing skills than uninfected children.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31513582 PMCID: PMC6742466 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|
| Article reported on a specific auditory processing skill; namely sound localization and lateralization, auditory discrimination, auditory temporal processing, auditory pattern processing, dichotic listening, auditory performance in competing acoustic signals, and auditory performance with degraded acoustic signals [ | Article did not refer to a specific auditory processing skill |
| Peer-reviewed journal articles | Non peer-reviewed journal articles, conference presentations and other sources of grey literature |
| Research/data driven articles only | Literature reviews and commentaries |
| Articles written in English | Articles not written in English |
| Study participants were HIV-infected children (18 years of age and under) | Study participants were HIV-infected adults (>18 years of age) |
Fig 1Flowchart depicting study selection process.
Key characteristics of included articles as these relate to auditory processing skills.
| Author(s) | Title | Study design (Level of evidence) | Study setting | Participants (Patient) | Assessment measure (Intervention) | Auditory processing skill (ASHA, 2005) (Outcome) | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Matas, Sansone, Iorio, & Succi (2000) | Audiological evaluation in children born to HIV positive mothers | Cross sectional | São Paulo, Brazil (urban) | 143 children aged 1 month to 30 months (HIV+ = 18, HEP = 34, HEU = 91) | BOA (size of response, timing of response, attention to sound, lateralization, localization in vertical plane, cochlea-palpebral reflex | Binaural interaction (lateralization/localization) | Central auditory impairment observed more often in HIV+ group than in two control groups. In HIV+ group, findings suggestive of central auditory disorder observed more frequently than findings indicating middle ear involvement. |
| Matas, Iori, Succi & CecÍlia (2008) | Auditory disorders and acquisition of the ability to localize sound in children born to HIV-positive mothers | Cross sectional | São Paulo, Brazil (urban) | 143 children aged 1 month to 30 months (HIV+ = 18, HEP = 34, HEU = 91) | BOA (size of response, timing of response, attention to sound, lateralization, localization in vertical plane, cochlea-palpebral reflex) | Binaural interaction (lateralization/localization) | Significant difference between HIV+ group and two control groups with regards to acquisition of ability to localise sound. |
| Palacios, Montalvo, Fraire, Leon, Alvarez & Solorzano (2008) | Audiologic and vestibular findings in a sample of Human Immunodeficiency Virus type-1- infected Mexican children under highly active antiretroviral therapy | Cross sectional | Mexico City, Mexico (urban) | 23 | Speech discrimination (9 participants) | Auditory discrimination | Abnormalities in speech discrimination observed in 4 children: 2 suggesting conductive involvement, 1 cochlear involvement and 1 central involvement observed in 1 child |
| Maro et al. (2016) | Auditory impairments in HIV-infected children | Cross sectional | Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (urban) | 244 | Gap detection (HIV+ = 48, HIV- = 19) sample size as reflected in Results section and not in Abstract | Auditory temporal processing and patterning | No significant difference in gap detection thresholds and ABR latencies between the HIV infected and control children. ABR latencies for HIV- group reflected in text 0.1msec longer than latency reflected in Results section. |
| Romero, Alfaya, Gonçales, Frizzo & Isaac (2017) | Auditory alterations in children infected by Human Immunodeficiency Virus verified through auditory processing test | Cross sectional | Sao Paula, Brazil (urban) | 15 children aged 8 to 9 years | SSW, SAPT (sound localization in 5 directions, memory for verbal sounds, memory for nonverbal sounds) | Binaural integration (dichotic speech), binaural interaction (localisation) | Auditory changes, related to auditory processing, observed. Difficulties observed related to deficits in attention, memory and auditory figure ground skills. 8-year olds performed poorer than 9-year olds suggesting a maturational effect. |
*Total number of children who underwent audiological assessment, not necessarily auditory processing assessment
HIV+ = children infected with HIV; HIV- = children who are HIV negative; HEU = children who have been exposed to the virus but are uninfected; HEP = children who have been exposed to the virus and are positive but their status has not been confirmed due to their age.
BOA = behavioural observation audiometry, SSW = staggered spondaic words, SAPT = simplified auditory processing test
Reference population and sampling approach.
| Study | Nationality | Reference population | Source | HIV diagnosis | Age |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palacios et al 2008 | Mexico | HIVP children < 17 years | AIDS outpatient clinic | all infected | 5mths—17 years |
| Matas et al 2000 | Brazil | Children born to HIV-infected mothers | Department of Pediatrics | HIV children (I), serum-reverted (SR) and exposed to HIV (I). | 1mth-2.5yrs |
| Romero et al 2017 | Brazil | Children with HIV | not stated | all infected | 8 or 9 years |
| Matas et al 2008 | Brazil | Children born to HIV-infected mothers | Department of Pediatrics | HIV children (I), serum-reverted (SR) and exposed to HIV (I). | 1mth-2.5yrs |
| Maro et al 2016 | Tanzania | HIVP children < 18 years | Pediatric Program at Infectious Disease Center | HIV+ children and HIVN family members | 0.8 yrs-to 18 yrs |