| Literature DB >> 34301203 |
Pornthep Kasemsiri1,2, Kwanchanok Yimtae3,4, Panida Thanawirattananit1,2, Pasin Israsena5, Anukool Noymai5, Supawan Laohasiriwong1,2, Patravoot Vatanasapt1,2, Pipop Siripaopradith6, Pritaporn Kingkaew7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hearing aids are important assistive devices for hearing rehabilitation. However, the cost of commonly available commercial hearing aids is often higher than the average monthly income of individuals in some developing countries. Therefore, there is a great need to locally produce cheaper, but still effective, hearing aids. The Thai-produced P02 hearing aid was designed to meet this requirement.Entities:
Keywords: Hearing aid; Hearing loss; Older adults; Rural community
Year: 2021 PMID: 34301203 PMCID: PMC8299624 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-021-02325-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1A–E The P02 is a digital programmable body-worn hearing aid. Its size dimensions are 65 mm × 45 mm × 15 mm, it has a built-in rechargeable battery, and its total weight is 25.7 g. The P02 device consists of a channel for programming the adjustment system (1), a battery capacity indicator (2), an ear receiver (3), an ear mould (4), an on/off switch (5), a channel charger (6), a battery compartment (red asterisk), a programme button (7), an amplifier speaker (blue asterisk), a microphone (8), and a volume control (9). The P02 has a 2-channel wide dynamic range compression with 5-band equalizer hearing aids. It has 4 memory slots with multi-memory tone indicators. Digital signal processing in the P02 provided sound with a maximum amplification output of 123 dB and an average peak gain of 66 dB. Regarding the occlusion effect, we adjusted the low-frequency gain and modified the ear mould with venting following an adjustment to the individual hearing threshold level
Comparison characteristics of the hearing aids
| Characteristics | P02 | Concerto basic | Clip-II™ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gain adjustable by pre-set options or user controls | Programmable | Screw trimmer | Screw trimmer |
| Electroacoustic specification (IEC118–7 2 cc. Coupler) | Digital | Digital | Digital |
| Maximum output (OSPL90) 118 ± 4 dBSPL | 123 dB SPL | 129 dB SPL | 129 dB SPL |
| Maximum output at 1 KHz (OSPL90) 114 ± 4 dB | 117 dB SPL | 121 dB SPL | 121 dB SPL |
| Maximum FOG (45–55 dB + 5 dB) | 66 dB SPL | 67 dB SPL | 67 dB SPL |
| Maximum FOG at 1 KHz (42 + 5 dB) | 63 dB SPL | 64 dB SPL | 64 dB SPL |
| Basic frequency range 200–4500 Hz | 573–4400 Hz | 100–3990 Hz | 130–3690 Hz |
| Total dynamic distortion 500 Hz < 5% | 0.6% | 2.6% | NA |
| Total dynamic distortion 800 Hz < 5% | 3.8% | 2.1% | 2.1% |
| Total dynamic distortion 1600 Hz < 2% | 0.4% | 0.1% | 0.1% |
| Equivalent input noise level < 25 dB SPL | 31.4 dB SPL | 24 dB SPL | 24 dB SPL |
| Powered by zinc-air or rechargeable | Rechargeable Lithium-ion | Zinc-air models | Zinc-air models |
| Battery current | 11.8 mA | 0.65 mA | 0.65 mA |
| Maintenance | Charged by electricity for 3 h every 3–4 days | Changing the battery every month | Changing the battery every month |
| Price | Estimated 100 USD | 300 USD | 300 USD |
Fig. 2The research study protocol
Demographic data
| Characteristics | Values | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| Sex (n) | ||
| Male | 46 (63.01%) | 51.55–73.18 |
| Female | 27 (36.99%) | 26.82–48.45 |
| Mean age ± SD | 73.67 ± 7.23 years | 71.98–75.36 |
| Range of age | 60–92 years | |
| Air-conduction PTA (500–2000 Hz) | ||
| Rt ear | 58.84 ± 14.84 dB | 55.38–62.30 |
| Lt ear | 57.64 ± 10.76 dB | 55.13–60.15 |
| Mean unaided PTA of fitting ear ± SD | ||
| 500–2000 Hz (ASHA) | 58.92 ± 7.42 dB | 57.19–60.65 |
| 500–3000 Hz (AAO-HNS) | 59.63 ± 7.57 dB | 57.86–61.39 |
| 500–4000 Hz (WHO) | 61.05 ± 7.67 dB | 59.26–62.84 |
Comparison of functional gain and speech discrimination among the three hearing aids
| Average functional gain (dB) | 20.14 ± 6.23 (95% CI: 18.66–21.54) | 19.41 ± 5.40 (95% CI: 18.15–20.65) | 19.44 ± 5.43 (95% CI: 18.15–20.65) |
| Average speech discrimination (%) | 67.8 ± 17.13 (95% CI: 63.80–71.79) | 67.6 ± 18.13 (95% CI: 63.37–71.83) | 68.8 ± 17.91 (95% CI: 64.62–72.98) |
| Mean difference of functional gain | 0.73 ± 4.08 (95% CI: − 0.22 - 1.68) | 0.70 ± 4.20 (95% CI: − 0.28 - 1.68) | 0.03 ± 2.84 (95% CI: − 0.63 - 0.69) |
| 0.13 | 0.16 | 0.93 | |
| Mean difference of speech discrimination | 0.22 ± 6.7 (95% CI: − 1.55 - 1.99) | 1.00 ± 6.45 (95% CI: − 0.51 - 2.50) | 1.22 ± 6.43 (95% CI: − 0.28 - 2.72) |
| 0.78 | 0.19 | 0.11 |
Fig. 3The mean air-conduction pure-tone aided and unaided thresholds for each frequency across the Clip-II™, the Concerto Basic®, and P02 hearing aids
Fig. 4Comparison of hearing aid performance