| Evaluation
of Hearing
Loss in Pediatrics
Hearing impairment can be a major cause of
developmental
problems in pediatrics and early detection can lead to intervention and
lessening of its effects on language development. It is important for
the
primary care physician to detect hearing deficits as early as
possible.
Incidence
- Hearing deficits secondary to the
presence
of middle
ear fluid is very common, mild, and usually transient. Its effects on
the
development of normal language is of questionable significance.
- Approximately 1.5/1000 children have
severe hearing
deficits that will effect development of normal language.
Diagnosis
- In some hospitals, all newborns are
screened. May soon
be required in Illinois.
- Parental suspicion of the child not
hearing should lead
to a careful evaluation of the child. The diagnosis of hearing deficits
is usually made by parents months before the doctors do. Children with
profound hearing loss may coo and babble although the babbling sounds
are
not varied. Hearing impaired children usually are sociable and play
normally.
These characteristics may fool the evaluator.
- Be suspicious if there is no response
to
loud noises,
no turning to noises by 6 months, no imitation of speech by 8-9 months,
no apparent understanding by 1 year, and no apparent speech by 2 years
of age.
- High risk groups that need screening
- 1500 grams at birth
- infants
- Infants requiring exchange
transfusion
for hyperbilirubinemia
- Exposure to ototoxic drugs such as
aminoglycosides and
furosemide
- Craniofacial anomalies and syndromes
associated with
hearing loss
- History of TORCH infections.
- Positive family history of deafness
- History of bacterial meningitis
Types of Hearing Loss
- Conductive- failure of the
sound
waves to be
transmitted to the inner ear. Common causes are cerumen in the canal,
narrow
canal, middle ear effusion, ossicle damage, perforated drum,
cholesteatoma
- Sensorineural- failure of
transduction of sound
into neural activity. Hair cell damage from noise or trauma, cochlea
damage
or agenesis, ototoxic drugs, eighth nerve damage.
- Central- tumors, demyelinating
diseases, syndromes.
Important questions to ask in History
- When was hearing problem first
recognized?
- Was the onset sudden or gradual? Often
difficult to
differentiate and asking about language milestones may give some clues
to time of onset
- Other symptoms including sense of ear
fullness, dizziness
and vertigo, tinnitus
- History of trauma, infections, family
history, developmental
delay, birth history, drug exposure.
Etiology
- Genetic- Congenital
- Multiple systems- Pendred (goiter),
Usher (blindness),
and Waardenburg (hypopoigmentation, white forelock)
- Chromosomal abnormalities- Trisomy
13-15, trisomy 18
and 21
- Craniofacial- Treacher Collins,
Piere
Robin, Klippel
Feil, Crouzons
- Lange Jewell Nielsen Syndrome
associated
with prolonged
QT syndrome
- Genetic Post-natal
- Alport
- Neurofibromatosis
- Hunter and Hurler syndromes.
- Non-genetic Congenital
- In-utero drug exposure-
aminoglycosides
- Congenital infections -TORCH
- Non-genetic post-natal
- Infections- meningitis, mumps and
rubeola.
- ototoxic drugs- aminoglycosides,
furosemide
- Noise
- Vascular injuries, trauma
Effect of Hearing Impairment
- Dependent on the age of diagnosis,
child's
IQ, other
developmental abnormalities, associated syndromes, and chromosomal
abnormalities.
- Family support very important on
prognosis
- Even mild hearing impairment can
affect
development,
personality, and school performance.
Evaluation of Hearing
- Any child with poor school performance
or
history of
inattentiveness needs their hearing screened. This includes all
children
with poor grades, ADD or ADHD, and emotional problems.
- Testing - May estimate hearing ability
by
child's response
to loud noise, older children's response to whispering simple commands
or questions. hearing ticking of watch
- Many offices are able to do audiograms
for
screening
purposes.
- If there are any doubts about the
child's
ability to
hear, referral should be made to trained audiologist for definitive
results.
Management
- The key to treatment is early
detection
and then a team
approach involving the primary care doctor, otolaryngologist,
audiologist,
speech and language specialist, educational specialist, and the
schools.
References
- Bachmann KR and Arvedson JC. Early
Identification and
Intervention for Children who are Hearing Impaired. Pediatrics in
Review.
1998; 19:155-165.
- Finitzo T, Albright K and O'Neal J. The
Newborn with Hearing Loss: Detection in the Nursery. Pediatrics.
1998;
102(6):1452-1460.
- Kveton, John. Hearing Loss in the
Absence
of Otitis
Media. Pediatrics in Review. March 1994.
- Mehl AL and Thomson V. Newborn
Hearing Screening: The Great Omission. Pediatrics. 1998; 101(1):e4.
- Rapin, Isabelle. Hearing Disorders.
Pediatrics in Review.
February 1993.
- Sokol and Hyde Hearing
Screening. Pediatrics in Review May 2002
- American Academy of Pediatrics.
Hearing Assessment
in Infants and Children: Recommendations Beyond Neonatal Screening.
Pediatrics
Vol 111 No. 2 February 2003
- Morton C. and Nance W. Newborn
Hearing Screening- A Silent Revolution. NEJM May 16, 2006
- Papsin B. and Gordon K. Cochlear
Implants for Children with Severe-to Profound Hearing Loss.
NEJM Dec 6, 2007
- Declau F et al.
Etiologic and Audiologic Evaluations After Universal Neonatal Hearing
Screening: Analysis of 170 Referred Neonates. Pediatrics
June 2008
- American Academy of Pediatrics. Clinical
Report-Hearing
Assessment
in Infants and Children: Recommendatons
Beyond Neonatal Screening. Pediatrics October 2009
- AAP
Cochlear Inplants in Children: Surgical Site Infections and Prevention
and Treatment of Acute Otitis Media and Meningitis.
Pediatrics August 2010
- Kral A and O'Donoghue G.
Profound Deafness in Childhood. NEJM October 7, 2010
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