| Literature DB >> 33174845 |
Heng-Yu Haley Lin1, Yuan-Chia Chu2,3,4, Ying-Hui Lai5, Hsiu-Lien Cheng5,6, Feipei Lai4,7,8, Yen-Fu Cheng6,9,10,11, Wen-Huei Liao6,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL) is an otologic emergency that warrants urgent management. Pure-tone audiometry remains the gold standard for definitively diagnosing SSNHL. However, in clinical settings such as primary care practices and urgent care facilities, conventional pure-tone audiometry is often unavailable.Entities:
Keywords: audiometry; hearing test; mobile apps; pure tone; sudden sensorineural hearing loss; telemedicine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33174845 PMCID: PMC7688380 DOI: 10.2196/23047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Screenshots of the Ear Scale app instructions for the subjects and the hearing test procedures.
Figure 2Hearing screening procedures used in this study.
Baseline characteristics of the study sample (n=88).
| Variables | Values | |
| Age in years, mean (SD) | 46 (14.7) | |
| Gender (female), n (%) | 44 (50) | |
|
| ||
| Grade 1 (PTAa ≤25 dB HLb) | 7 (8) | |
| Grade 2 (PTA 26-45 dB HL) | 8 (9) | |
| Grade 3 (PTA 46-75 dB HL) | 43 (49) | |
| Grade 4 (PTA 76-90 dB HL) | 16 (18) | |
| Grade 5 (PTA >90 dB HL) | 14 (16) | |
| PTA of worst-hearing ear, dB, mean (SD) | 67.1 (24.9) | |
| Average scale of worst-hearing ear, mean (SD) | 17 (4.2) | |
| Average PTA differencec, dB, mean (SD) | 47.6 (25.0) | |
| Average scale differenced, mean (SD) | 9 (4.4) | |
aPTA: pure-tone average.
bdB HL: decibel hearing level.
cPTA difference = PTA of impaired ear – PTA of contralateral ear. dHearing scale difference = hearing scale of impaired ear – hearing scale of contralateral ear.
Figure 3Scatter plots demonstrating the (a) correlation between the pure-tone average (PTA) obtained by pure-tone audiometry (y-axis) and the hearing scale measured by the Ear Scale app (x-axis) and (b) correlation between the PTA differences and hearing scale differences between the impaired and contralateral ears.
Figure 4Box plot of the pure-tone average (PTA) difference (y-axis) in relation to the hearing scale difference (x-axis) between the impaired and contralateral ears. The green line depicts the best-fitted mean PTA difference in relation to the hearing scale difference for the linear regression, and the green area represents the 95% confidence interval of the model (P<.05, significant differences were found between each hearing scale difference group). The dashed line represents PTA differences of 30 dB (ie, diagnostic gold standard for detecting sudden sensorineural hearing loss in this study).
Diagnostic validity of the hearing scale differencea.
| Hearing scale difference | Sensitivity, % (95% CI) | Specificity, % (95% CI) | PPVb, % (95% CI) | NPVc, % (95% CI) |
| 5 hearing scales (25 dB ) | 95.5 (87.5-99.1) | 66.7 (43.0-85.4) | 90.1 (80.7-95.9) | 82.3 (56.6-96.2) |
| 6 hearing scales (30 dB) | 92.5 (83.4-97.5) | 85.7 (63.7-97.0) | 95.4 (87.1-99.0) | 78.3 (56.3-92.5) |
| 7 hearing scales (35 dB) | 91.0 (81.5-96.6) | 90.5 (69.6-98.8) | 96.8 (89.0-99.6) | 76.0 (54.9-90.6) |
aHearing scale difference = hearing scale of impaired ear – hearing scale of contralateral ear.
bPPV: positive predictive value.
cNPV: negative predictive value.
Comparison of key characteristics among different approaches for identifying sudden sensorineural hearing loss.
| Diagnostic approach | Author | Audiometric criteria of SSNHLa | Role | Sample size, n | Measurement unit | Sensitivity/specificity, % |
| Conventional pure-tone audiometry | Stachler et al [ | A decrease in hearing of ≥30 dB, affecting at least 3 consecutive frequenciesb,c | Gold standard | —d | dB HLe | — |
| uHear hearing test app | Handzel et al [ | Hearing loss of at least 2 hearing grades across 3 or more consecutive frequenciesc,f | Smartphone-based test | 32 | Hearing grade | 76.0/91.0 |
| Ear Scale app (current study) | Lin et al [ | Hearing loss of at least 5 hearing scales differencec | Smartphone-based test | 88 | Hearing scale | 95.5/66.7 |
aSSNHL: sudden sensorineural hearing loss.
bDefinition according to the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery guidelines [1].
cHearing loss is defined as related to the opposite ear’s thresholds.
dnot available.
edB HL: decibel hearing level.
fHearing thresholds are grouped into 6 grades (American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 2012: normal 0-25 dB, mild 26-40 dB HL, moderate 41-55 dB HL, moderately severe 56-70 dB HL, severe 71-90 dB HL, profound >90 dB HL).