Παρασκευή 11 Μαρτίου 2016

The effects of predictability on inter-limb postural synchronization prior to bouts of postural instability

Publication date: Available online 11 March 2016
Source:Gait & Posture
Author(s): Olinda Habib Perez, C. Jonathan Singer, George Mochizuki
Anticipatory balance control optimizes balance reactions to postural perturbations. Predictive control is dependent on the ability of the central nervous system to modulate gain in accordance with specific task demands. Inter-limb synchronization is a sensitive measure of individual limb contributions to balance control and may reflect the coordination of gain modulation in preparation for instability. The purpose of the study was to determine whether gain modulation in advance of predictable bouts of instability was reflected in the extent of inter-limb synchronization. Two adjacent force plates were used to collect centre of pressure (COP) data from 12 healthy young adults (27.5±3.4 years). Participants prepared for internal and external balance perturbations using a cueing paradigm with three auditory warning tones followed by an imperative tone. Perturbations were delivered in blocked and randomized conditions with two perturbation magnitudes (small and large). Inter-limb synchrony was calculated using the cross-correlation function of the COP excursions from the left and right foot for three seconds prior to perturbation onset in the anteroposterior (AP) and mediolateral (ML) direction. Inter-limb synchrony decreased in the AP and ML directions as perturbation magnitude became more unpredictable. The need to take a step or not knowing whether a step was required prior to postural instability reduced ML inter-limb synchrony. No differences were found between internal and external perturbations. Modulation of postural set was evident in the extent of inter-limb synchrony.



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Attentional costs of walking are not affected by variations in lateral balance demands in young and older adults

Publication date: Available online 11 March 2016
Source:Gait & Posture
Author(s): Masood Mazaheri, Melvyn Roerdink, Jacques Duysens, Peter J. Beek, C. (Lieke) E. Peper
Increased attentional costs of walking in older adults have been attributed to age-related changes in visuomotor and/or balance control of walking. The present experiment was conducted to examine the hypothesis that attentional costs of walking vary with lateral balance demands during walking in young and older adults. Twenty young and twenty older adults walked on a treadmill at their preferred walking speed under five conditions: unconstrained normal walking, walking on projected visual lines corresponding to either the participant's preferred step width or 50% thereof (i.e., increased balance demand), and walking within low- and high-stiffness lateral stabilization frames (i.e., lower balance demands). Attentional costs were assessed using a probe reaction-time task during these five walking conditions, normalized to baseline performance as obtained during sitting. Both imposed step-width conditions were more attentionally demanding than the three other conditions, in the absence of any other significant differences between conditions. These effects were similar in the two groups. The results indicate that the attentional costs of walking were, in contrast to what has been postulated previously, not influenced by lateral balance demands. The observed difference in attentional costs between normal walking and both visual lines conditions suggests that visuomotor control processes, rather than balance control, strongly affect the attentional costs of walking. A tentative explanation of these results may be that visuomotor control processes are mainly governed by attention-demanding cortical processes, whereas balance is regulated predominantly subcortically.



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The effects of predictability on inter-limb postural synchronization prior to bouts of postural instability

Publication date: Available online 11 March 2016
Source:Gait & Posture
Author(s): Olinda Habib Perez, C. Jonathan Singer, George Mochizuki
Anticipatory balance control optimizes balance reactions to postural perturbations. Predictive control is dependent on the ability of the central nervous system to modulate gain in accordance with specific task demands. Inter-limb synchronization is a sensitive measure of individual limb contributions to balance control and may reflect the coordination of gain modulation in preparation for instability. The purpose of the study was to determine whether gain modulation in advance of predictable bouts of instability was reflected in the extent of inter-limb synchronization. Two adjacent force plates were used to collect centre of pressure (COP) data from 12 healthy young adults (27.5±3.4 years). Participants prepared for internal and external balance perturbations using a cueing paradigm with three auditory warning tones followed by an imperative tone. Perturbations were delivered in blocked and randomized conditions with two perturbation magnitudes (small and large). Inter-limb synchrony was calculated using the cross-correlation function of the COP excursions from the left and right foot for three seconds prior to perturbation onset in the anteroposterior (AP) and mediolateral (ML) direction. Inter-limb synchrony decreased in the AP and ML directions as perturbation magnitude became more unpredictable. The need to take a step or not knowing whether a step was required prior to postural instability reduced ML inter-limb synchrony. No differences were found between internal and external perturbations. Modulation of postural set was evident in the extent of inter-limb synchrony.



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Attentional costs of walking are not affected by variations in lateral balance demands in young and older adults

Publication date: Available online 11 March 2016
Source:Gait & Posture
Author(s): Masood Mazaheri, Melvyn Roerdink, Jacques Duysens, Peter J. Beek, C. (Lieke) E. Peper
Increased attentional costs of walking in older adults have been attributed to age-related changes in visuomotor and/or balance control of walking. The present experiment was conducted to examine the hypothesis that attentional costs of walking vary with lateral balance demands during walking in young and older adults. Twenty young and twenty older adults walked on a treadmill at their preferred walking speed under five conditions: unconstrained normal walking, walking on projected visual lines corresponding to either the participant's preferred step width or 50% thereof (i.e., increased balance demand), and walking within low- and high-stiffness lateral stabilization frames (i.e., lower balance demands). Attentional costs were assessed using a probe reaction-time task during these five walking conditions, normalized to baseline performance as obtained during sitting. Both imposed step-width conditions were more attentionally demanding than the three other conditions, in the absence of any other significant differences between conditions. These effects were similar in the two groups. The results indicate that the attentional costs of walking were, in contrast to what has been postulated previously, not influenced by lateral balance demands. The observed difference in attentional costs between normal walking and both visual lines conditions suggests that visuomotor control processes, rather than balance control, strongly affect the attentional costs of walking. A tentative explanation of these results may be that visuomotor control processes are mainly governed by attention-demanding cortical processes, whereas balance is regulated predominantly subcortically.



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The effects of predictability on inter-limb postural synchronization prior to bouts of postural instability

Publication date: Available online 11 March 2016
Source:Gait & Posture
Author(s): Olinda Habib Perez, C. Jonathan Singer, George Mochizuki
Anticipatory balance control optimizes balance reactions to postural perturbations. Predictive control is dependent on the ability of the central nervous system to modulate gain in accordance with specific task demands. Inter-limb synchronization is a sensitive measure of individual limb contributions to balance control and may reflect the coordination of gain modulation in preparation for instability. The purpose of the study was to determine whether gain modulation in advance of predictable bouts of instability was reflected in the extent of inter-limb synchronization. Two adjacent force plates were used to collect centre of pressure (COP) data from 12 healthy young adults (27.5±3.4 years). Participants prepared for internal and external balance perturbations using a cueing paradigm with three auditory warning tones followed by an imperative tone. Perturbations were delivered in blocked and randomized conditions with two perturbation magnitudes (small and large). Inter-limb synchrony was calculated using the cross-correlation function of the COP excursions from the left and right foot for three seconds prior to perturbation onset in the anteroposterior (AP) and mediolateral (ML) direction. Inter-limb synchrony decreased in the AP and ML directions as perturbation magnitude became more unpredictable. The need to take a step or not knowing whether a step was required prior to postural instability reduced ML inter-limb synchrony. No differences were found between internal and external perturbations. Modulation of postural set was evident in the extent of inter-limb synchrony.



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Attentional costs of walking are not affected by variations in lateral balance demands in young and older adults

Publication date: Available online 11 March 2016
Source:Gait & Posture
Author(s): Masood Mazaheri, Melvyn Roerdink, Jacques Duysens, Peter J. Beek, C. (Lieke) E. Peper
Increased attentional costs of walking in older adults have been attributed to age-related changes in visuomotor and/or balance control of walking. The present experiment was conducted to examine the hypothesis that attentional costs of walking vary with lateral balance demands during walking in young and older adults. Twenty young and twenty older adults walked on a treadmill at their preferred walking speed under five conditions: unconstrained normal walking, walking on projected visual lines corresponding to either the participant's preferred step width or 50% thereof (i.e., increased balance demand), and walking within low- and high-stiffness lateral stabilization frames (i.e., lower balance demands). Attentional costs were assessed using a probe reaction-time task during these five walking conditions, normalized to baseline performance as obtained during sitting. Both imposed step-width conditions were more attentionally demanding than the three other conditions, in the absence of any other significant differences between conditions. These effects were similar in the two groups. The results indicate that the attentional costs of walking were, in contrast to what has been postulated previously, not influenced by lateral balance demands. The observed difference in attentional costs between normal walking and both visual lines conditions suggests that visuomotor control processes, rather than balance control, strongly affect the attentional costs of walking. A tentative explanation of these results may be that visuomotor control processes are mainly governed by attention-demanding cortical processes, whereas balance is regulated predominantly subcortically.



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Reference-Free Assessment of Speech Intelligibility Using Bispectrum of an Auditory Neurogram

Sensorineural hearing loss occurs due to damage to the inner and outer hair cells of the peripheral auditory system. Hearing loss can cause decreases in audibility, dynamic range, frequency and temporal resolution of the auditory system, and all of these effects are known to affect speech intelligibility. In this study, a new reference-free speech intelligibility metric is proposed using 2-D neurograms constructed from the output of a computational model of the auditory periphery. The responses of the auditory-nerve fibers with a wide range of characteristic frequencies were simulated to construct neurograms. The features of the neurograms were extracted using third-order statistics referred to as bispectrum. The phase coupling of neurogram bispectrum provides a unique insight for the presence (or deficit) of supra-threshold nonlinearities beyond audibility for listeners with normal hearing (or hearing loss). The speech intelligibility scores predicted by the proposed method were compared to the behavioral scores for listeners with normal hearing and hearing loss both in quiet and under noisy background conditions. The results were also compared to the performance of some existing methods. The predicted results showed a good fit with a small error suggesting that the subjective scores can be estimated reliably using the proposed neural-response-based metric. The proposed metric also had a wide dynamic range, and the predicted scores were well-separated as a function of hearing loss. The proposed metric successfully captures the effects of hearing loss and supra-threshold nonlinearities on speech intelligibility. This metric could be applied to evaluate the performance of various speech-processing algorithms designed for hearing aids and cochlear implants.

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Global examination of the wind-dependence of very low frequency underwater ambient noisea)

cm_sbs_024_plain.png

Oceansurfacewinds play a key role in underwater ambient noise generation. One particular frequency band of interest is the infrasonic or very low frequency (VLF) band from 1 to 20 Hz. In this spectral band, wind generated oceansurface waves interact non-linearly to produce acoustic waves, which couple into the seafloor to generate microseisms, as explained by the theory developed by Longuet-Higgins. This study examines long term data sets in the VLF portion of the ambient noise spectrum, collected by the hydroacoustic systems of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test Ban Treaty Organization in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans. Three properties of the noise field were examined: (a) the behavior of the acoustic spectrum slope from 1 to 5 Hz, (b) correlation of noise levels and wind speeds, and (c) the autocorrelation behavior of both the noise field and the wind.Analysis results indicate the spectrum slope is site dependent, and for both correlation methods, a high correlation between wind and the noise field in the 1–5 Hz band.



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Auditory evoked potentials in the auditory system of a beluga whale Delphinapterus leucas to prolonged sound stimuli

cm_sbs_024_plain.png

The effects of prolonged (up to 1500 s) sound stimuli (tone pip trains) on evoked potentials (the rate following response, RFR) were investigated in a beluga whale. The stimuli (rhythmic tone pips) were of frequencies of 45, 64, and 90 kHz at levels from 20 to 60 dB above threshold. Two experimental protocols were used: short- and long-duration. For the short-duration protocol, the stimuli were 500-ms-long pip trains that repeated at a rate of 0.4 trains/s. For the long-duration protocol, the stimuli were continuous pip successions lasting up to 1500 s. The RFR amplitude gradually decreased by three to seven times from 10 ms to 1500 s of stimulation. Decrease of response amplitude during stimulation was approximately proportional to initial (at the start of stimulation) response amplitude. Therefore, even for low stimulus level (down to 20 dB above the baseline threshold) the response was never suppressed completely. The RFR amplitude decay that occurred during stimulation could be satisfactorily approximated by a combination of two exponents with time constants of 30−80 ms and 3.1−17.6 s. The role of adaptation in the described effects and the impact of noise on the acoustic orientation of odontocetes are discussed.



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Temporal alignment of pupillary response with stimulus events via deconvolutiona)

cm_sbs_024_plain.png

Analysis of pupil dilation has been used as an index of attentional effort in the auditory domain. Previous work has modeled the pupillary response to attentional effort as a linear time-invariant system with a characteristic impulse response, and used deconvolution to estimate the attentional effort that gives rise to changes in pupil size. Here it is argued that one parameter of the impulse response (the latency of response maximum, ) has been mis-estimated in the literature; a different estimate is presented, and it is shown how deconvolution with this value of yields more intuitively plausible and informative results.



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Temporal alignment of pupillary response with stimulus events via deconvolutiona)

Analysis of pupil dilation has been used as an index of attentional effort in the auditory domain. Previous work has modeled the pupillary response to attentional effort as a linear time-invariant system with a characteristic impulse response, and used deconvolution to estimate the attentional effort that gives rise to changes in pupil size. Here it is argued that one parameter of the impulse response (the latency of response maximum, ) has been mis-estimated in the literature; a different estimate is presented, and it is shown how deconvolution with this value of yields more intuitively plausible and informative results.



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D-methionine (D-met) significantly reduces kanamycin-induced ototoxicity in pigmented guinea pigs.

D-methionine (D-met) significantly reduces kanamycin-induced ototoxicity in pigmented guinea pigs.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Campbell KC, Martin SM, Meech RP, Hargrove TL, Verhulst SJ, Fox DJ

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Test D-methionine (D-met) as an otoprotectant from kanamycin-induced ototoxicity and determine the lowest maximally protective D-met dose.
DESIGN: Auditory brainstem responses (ABR) were measured at 4, 8, 14, and 20 kHz at baseline and two, four, and six weeks after kanamycin and D-met administration initiation. ABR threshold shifts assessed auditory function. Following six-week ABR testing, animals were decapitated and cochleae collected for outer hair cell (OHC) quantification.
STUDY SAMPLE: Eight groups of 10 male pigmented guinea pigs were administered a subcutaneous kanamycin (250 mg/kg/dose) injection once per day and an intraperitoneal D-met injection (0 (saline), 120, 180, 240, 300, 360, 420, or 480 mg/kg/day) twice per day for 23 days.
RESULTS: Significant ABR threshold shift reductions and increased OHC counts (p ≤0.01) were measured at multiple D-met-dosed groups starting at two-week ABR assessments. A 300 mg/kg/day optimal otoprotective D-met dose provided 34-41 dB ABR threshold shift reductions and OHC protection. Lesser, but significant, D-met otoprotection was measured at lower and higher D-met doses.
CONCLUSIONS: D-met significantly reduced ABR threshold shifts and increased OHC percentages compared to kanamycin-treated controls. Results may be clinically significant particularly for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis patients who frequently suffer from kanamycin-induced hearing loss in developing countries.

PMID: 26963517 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Psychometric properties of a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire.

Psychometric properties of a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-9

Authors: Meng Z, Chen Z, Xu K, Li G, Tao Y, Kwong JS

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To develop a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire (MTQ) and determine the reliability and validity, and to assess whether it could be used clinically in the Chinese population.
DESIGN: The MTQ, short-form (36) health survey, hospital anxiety and depression scale, Mandarin (Chinese) tinnitus handicap inventory, and visual analogue scale were completed by the participants.
STUDY SAMPLE: We included 192 adults seeking treatment for primary or secondary tinnitus.
RESULTS: Five factors, namely, emotional distress, auditory perceptual difficulties, cognitive distress, sleep disturbance, and intrusiveness, were extracted from the MTQ. Thirty-seven items were included. The MTQ had high test-retest reliability (Spearman correlation coefficients: 0.87-1.00). The MTQ and its subscales had good internal consistency and reliability (total α = 0.93, subscales α = 0.71-0.86). A single measure of severity can be acquired by summing the five subscale scores. The MTQ was significantly correlated with psychological distress and tinnitus-related handicap.
CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrated that the MTQ is a reliable and valid measure of tinnitus-related psychopathological symptoms and could be used clinically to evaluate tinnitus-related psychological problems. Questionnaires designed to explore tinnitus-related depression and other symptoms not covered by the scope of the MTQ are needed.

PMID: 26963398 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Comorbidities and recurrence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: personal experience.

Comorbidities and recurrence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: personal experience.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Picciotti PM, Lucidi D, De Corso E, Meucci D, Sergi B, Paludetti G

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the correlation between clinical features of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) and age, sex, trauma, presence of one or more comorbidities such as cardiovascular, neurological, endocrinological, metabolic, psychiatric diseases.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of medical records (chart review).
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 475 patients aged from 14 to 87 years, affected by BPPV.
RESULTS: Recurrence of BPPV occurred in 139/475 patients (29.2%). The recurrence rate was significantly higher in female and older patients. Comorbidities were present in 72.6% of subjects with recurrent BPPV vs. 48.9% of patients with no recurrence (p <0.01). Forty-two patients (8.8%) reported a cranial trauma as a triggering event. Post-traumatic patients showed a significantly higher persistence rate (45.2%) compared to patients affected by non-traumatic BPPV (20.5%). Recurrence rates are overlapping between the two groups.
CONCLUSION: Our results confirm the association between recurrence of BPPV and age, female sex, and presence of comorbidities. The correlation is stronger in patients affected by multiple associated diseases; the most frequently involved pathologies are psychiatric disorders, followed by neurological and vascular diseases. Collecting a complete medical history is important for prognostic stratification and detection of potential underlying pathological conditions.

PMID: 26963274 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Leigh JR, Moran M, Hollow R, Dowell RC

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Adult selection criteria for cochlear implantation have been developed based on analysis of the post-operative performance of a large group of postlingually deafened adults. Original criteria published in 2004 were reviewed and amended to reflect outcomes currently being achieved by implant recipients.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of 12-month post-operative speech perception performance of adults implanted at the Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 382 postlingually deafened adults, using a Freedom, Nucleus 5, or CI422 Slim Straight cochlear implant were used to create a comparative set of data.
RESULTS: Revised guidelines suggest that adults with postlingual hearing loss can now be considered cochlear implant candidates if they obtain scores of up to 55% for open-set phonemes in quiet in the ear to be implanted. Functional benefit may vary depending on the recipients' contralateral hearing.
CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the provision of cochlear implants to candidates with significant residual hearing when at least one ear meets the criterion outlined above. Patient-specific counseling is required to ensure the potential to benefit predicted by the current model is acceptable to the individual patient and their family. Counseling regarding functional benefit must take into consideration hearing in the contralateral ear.

PMID: 26963131 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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D-methionine (D-met) significantly reduces kanamycin-induced ototoxicity in pigmented guinea pigs.

D-methionine (D-met) significantly reduces kanamycin-induced ototoxicity in pigmented guinea pigs.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Campbell KC, Martin SM, Meech RP, Hargrove TL, Verhulst SJ, Fox DJ

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Test D-methionine (D-met) as an otoprotectant from kanamycin-induced ototoxicity and determine the lowest maximally protective D-met dose.
DESIGN: Auditory brainstem responses (ABR) were measured at 4, 8, 14, and 20 kHz at baseline and two, four, and six weeks after kanamycin and D-met administration initiation. ABR threshold shifts assessed auditory function. Following six-week ABR testing, animals were decapitated and cochleae collected for outer hair cell (OHC) quantification.
STUDY SAMPLE: Eight groups of 10 male pigmented guinea pigs were administered a subcutaneous kanamycin (250 mg/kg/dose) injection once per day and an intraperitoneal D-met injection (0 (saline), 120, 180, 240, 300, 360, 420, or 480 mg/kg/day) twice per day for 23 days.
RESULTS: Significant ABR threshold shift reductions and increased OHC counts (p ≤0.01) were measured at multiple D-met-dosed groups starting at two-week ABR assessments. A 300 mg/kg/day optimal otoprotective D-met dose provided 34-41 dB ABR threshold shift reductions and OHC protection. Lesser, but significant, D-met otoprotection was measured at lower and higher D-met doses.
CONCLUSIONS: D-met significantly reduced ABR threshold shifts and increased OHC percentages compared to kanamycin-treated controls. Results may be clinically significant particularly for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis patients who frequently suffer from kanamycin-induced hearing loss in developing countries.

PMID: 26963517 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Psychometric properties of a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire.

Psychometric properties of a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-9

Authors: Meng Z, Chen Z, Xu K, Li G, Tao Y, Kwong JS

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To develop a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire (MTQ) and determine the reliability and validity, and to assess whether it could be used clinically in the Chinese population.
DESIGN: The MTQ, short-form (36) health survey, hospital anxiety and depression scale, Mandarin (Chinese) tinnitus handicap inventory, and visual analogue scale were completed by the participants.
STUDY SAMPLE: We included 192 adults seeking treatment for primary or secondary tinnitus.
RESULTS: Five factors, namely, emotional distress, auditory perceptual difficulties, cognitive distress, sleep disturbance, and intrusiveness, were extracted from the MTQ. Thirty-seven items were included. The MTQ had high test-retest reliability (Spearman correlation coefficients: 0.87-1.00). The MTQ and its subscales had good internal consistency and reliability (total α = 0.93, subscales α = 0.71-0.86). A single measure of severity can be acquired by summing the five subscale scores. The MTQ was significantly correlated with psychological distress and tinnitus-related handicap.
CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrated that the MTQ is a reliable and valid measure of tinnitus-related psychopathological symptoms and could be used clinically to evaluate tinnitus-related psychological problems. Questionnaires designed to explore tinnitus-related depression and other symptoms not covered by the scope of the MTQ are needed.

PMID: 26963398 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Comorbidities and recurrence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: personal experience.

Comorbidities and recurrence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: personal experience.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Picciotti PM, Lucidi D, De Corso E, Meucci D, Sergi B, Paludetti G

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the correlation between clinical features of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) and age, sex, trauma, presence of one or more comorbidities such as cardiovascular, neurological, endocrinological, metabolic, psychiatric diseases.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of medical records (chart review).
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 475 patients aged from 14 to 87 years, affected by BPPV.
RESULTS: Recurrence of BPPV occurred in 139/475 patients (29.2%). The recurrence rate was significantly higher in female and older patients. Comorbidities were present in 72.6% of subjects with recurrent BPPV vs. 48.9% of patients with no recurrence (p <0.01). Forty-two patients (8.8%) reported a cranial trauma as a triggering event. Post-traumatic patients showed a significantly higher persistence rate (45.2%) compared to patients affected by non-traumatic BPPV (20.5%). Recurrence rates are overlapping between the two groups.
CONCLUSION: Our results confirm the association between recurrence of BPPV and age, female sex, and presence of comorbidities. The correlation is stronger in patients affected by multiple associated diseases; the most frequently involved pathologies are psychiatric disorders, followed by neurological and vascular diseases. Collecting a complete medical history is important for prognostic stratification and detection of potential underlying pathological conditions.

PMID: 26963274 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Leigh JR, Moran M, Hollow R, Dowell RC

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Adult selection criteria for cochlear implantation have been developed based on analysis of the post-operative performance of a large group of postlingually deafened adults. Original criteria published in 2004 were reviewed and amended to reflect outcomes currently being achieved by implant recipients.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of 12-month post-operative speech perception performance of adults implanted at the Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 382 postlingually deafened adults, using a Freedom, Nucleus 5, or CI422 Slim Straight cochlear implant were used to create a comparative set of data.
RESULTS: Revised guidelines suggest that adults with postlingual hearing loss can now be considered cochlear implant candidates if they obtain scores of up to 55% for open-set phonemes in quiet in the ear to be implanted. Functional benefit may vary depending on the recipients' contralateral hearing.
CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the provision of cochlear implants to candidates with significant residual hearing when at least one ear meets the criterion outlined above. Patient-specific counseling is required to ensure the potential to benefit predicted by the current model is acceptable to the individual patient and their family. Counseling regarding functional benefit must take into consideration hearing in the contralateral ear.

PMID: 26963131 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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D-methionine (D-met) significantly reduces kanamycin-induced ototoxicity in pigmented guinea pigs.

D-methionine (D-met) significantly reduces kanamycin-induced ototoxicity in pigmented guinea pigs.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Campbell KC, Martin SM, Meech RP, Hargrove TL, Verhulst SJ, Fox DJ

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Test D-methionine (D-met) as an otoprotectant from kanamycin-induced ototoxicity and determine the lowest maximally protective D-met dose.
DESIGN: Auditory brainstem responses (ABR) were measured at 4, 8, 14, and 20 kHz at baseline and two, four, and six weeks after kanamycin and D-met administration initiation. ABR threshold shifts assessed auditory function. Following six-week ABR testing, animals were decapitated and cochleae collected for outer hair cell (OHC) quantification.
STUDY SAMPLE: Eight groups of 10 male pigmented guinea pigs were administered a subcutaneous kanamycin (250 mg/kg/dose) injection once per day and an intraperitoneal D-met injection (0 (saline), 120, 180, 240, 300, 360, 420, or 480 mg/kg/day) twice per day for 23 days.
RESULTS: Significant ABR threshold shift reductions and increased OHC counts (p ≤0.01) were measured at multiple D-met-dosed groups starting at two-week ABR assessments. A 300 mg/kg/day optimal otoprotective D-met dose provided 34-41 dB ABR threshold shift reductions and OHC protection. Lesser, but significant, D-met otoprotection was measured at lower and higher D-met doses.
CONCLUSIONS: D-met significantly reduced ABR threshold shifts and increased OHC percentages compared to kanamycin-treated controls. Results may be clinically significant particularly for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis patients who frequently suffer from kanamycin-induced hearing loss in developing countries.

PMID: 26963517 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Psychometric properties of a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire.

Psychometric properties of a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-9

Authors: Meng Z, Chen Z, Xu K, Li G, Tao Y, Kwong JS

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To develop a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire (MTQ) and determine the reliability and validity, and to assess whether it could be used clinically in the Chinese population.
DESIGN: The MTQ, short-form (36) health survey, hospital anxiety and depression scale, Mandarin (Chinese) tinnitus handicap inventory, and visual analogue scale were completed by the participants.
STUDY SAMPLE: We included 192 adults seeking treatment for primary or secondary tinnitus.
RESULTS: Five factors, namely, emotional distress, auditory perceptual difficulties, cognitive distress, sleep disturbance, and intrusiveness, were extracted from the MTQ. Thirty-seven items were included. The MTQ had high test-retest reliability (Spearman correlation coefficients: 0.87-1.00). The MTQ and its subscales had good internal consistency and reliability (total α = 0.93, subscales α = 0.71-0.86). A single measure of severity can be acquired by summing the five subscale scores. The MTQ was significantly correlated with psychological distress and tinnitus-related handicap.
CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrated that the MTQ is a reliable and valid measure of tinnitus-related psychopathological symptoms and could be used clinically to evaluate tinnitus-related psychological problems. Questionnaires designed to explore tinnitus-related depression and other symptoms not covered by the scope of the MTQ are needed.

PMID: 26963398 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Comorbidities and recurrence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: personal experience.

Comorbidities and recurrence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: personal experience.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Picciotti PM, Lucidi D, De Corso E, Meucci D, Sergi B, Paludetti G

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the correlation between clinical features of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) and age, sex, trauma, presence of one or more comorbidities such as cardiovascular, neurological, endocrinological, metabolic, psychiatric diseases.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of medical records (chart review).
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 475 patients aged from 14 to 87 years, affected by BPPV.
RESULTS: Recurrence of BPPV occurred in 139/475 patients (29.2%). The recurrence rate was significantly higher in female and older patients. Comorbidities were present in 72.6% of subjects with recurrent BPPV vs. 48.9% of patients with no recurrence (p <0.01). Forty-two patients (8.8%) reported a cranial trauma as a triggering event. Post-traumatic patients showed a significantly higher persistence rate (45.2%) compared to patients affected by non-traumatic BPPV (20.5%). Recurrence rates are overlapping between the two groups.
CONCLUSION: Our results confirm the association between recurrence of BPPV and age, female sex, and presence of comorbidities. The correlation is stronger in patients affected by multiple associated diseases; the most frequently involved pathologies are psychiatric disorders, followed by neurological and vascular diseases. Collecting a complete medical history is important for prognostic stratification and detection of potential underlying pathological conditions.

PMID: 26963274 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Leigh JR, Moran M, Hollow R, Dowell RC

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Adult selection criteria for cochlear implantation have been developed based on analysis of the post-operative performance of a large group of postlingually deafened adults. Original criteria published in 2004 were reviewed and amended to reflect outcomes currently being achieved by implant recipients.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of 12-month post-operative speech perception performance of adults implanted at the Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 382 postlingually deafened adults, using a Freedom, Nucleus 5, or CI422 Slim Straight cochlear implant were used to create a comparative set of data.
RESULTS: Revised guidelines suggest that adults with postlingual hearing loss can now be considered cochlear implant candidates if they obtain scores of up to 55% for open-set phonemes in quiet in the ear to be implanted. Functional benefit may vary depending on the recipients' contralateral hearing.
CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the provision of cochlear implants to candidates with significant residual hearing when at least one ear meets the criterion outlined above. Patient-specific counseling is required to ensure the potential to benefit predicted by the current model is acceptable to the individual patient and their family. Counseling regarding functional benefit must take into consideration hearing in the contralateral ear.

PMID: 26963131 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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D-methionine (D-met) significantly reduces kanamycin-induced ototoxicity in pigmented guinea pigs.

D-methionine (D-met) significantly reduces kanamycin-induced ototoxicity in pigmented guinea pigs.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Campbell KC, Martin SM, Meech RP, Hargrove TL, Verhulst SJ, Fox DJ

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Test D-methionine (D-met) as an otoprotectant from kanamycin-induced ototoxicity and determine the lowest maximally protective D-met dose.
DESIGN: Auditory brainstem responses (ABR) were measured at 4, 8, 14, and 20 kHz at baseline and two, four, and six weeks after kanamycin and D-met administration initiation. ABR threshold shifts assessed auditory function. Following six-week ABR testing, animals were decapitated and cochleae collected for outer hair cell (OHC) quantification.
STUDY SAMPLE: Eight groups of 10 male pigmented guinea pigs were administered a subcutaneous kanamycin (250 mg/kg/dose) injection once per day and an intraperitoneal D-met injection (0 (saline), 120, 180, 240, 300, 360, 420, or 480 mg/kg/day) twice per day for 23 days.
RESULTS: Significant ABR threshold shift reductions and increased OHC counts (p ≤0.01) were measured at multiple D-met-dosed groups starting at two-week ABR assessments. A 300 mg/kg/day optimal otoprotective D-met dose provided 34-41 dB ABR threshold shift reductions and OHC protection. Lesser, but significant, D-met otoprotection was measured at lower and higher D-met doses.
CONCLUSIONS: D-met significantly reduced ABR threshold shifts and increased OHC percentages compared to kanamycin-treated controls. Results may be clinically significant particularly for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis patients who frequently suffer from kanamycin-induced hearing loss in developing countries.

PMID: 26963517 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Psychometric properties of a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire.

Psychometric properties of a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-9

Authors: Meng Z, Chen Z, Xu K, Li G, Tao Y, Kwong JS

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To develop a Mandarin version of the tinnitus questionnaire (MTQ) and determine the reliability and validity, and to assess whether it could be used clinically in the Chinese population.
DESIGN: The MTQ, short-form (36) health survey, hospital anxiety and depression scale, Mandarin (Chinese) tinnitus handicap inventory, and visual analogue scale were completed by the participants.
STUDY SAMPLE: We included 192 adults seeking treatment for primary or secondary tinnitus.
RESULTS: Five factors, namely, emotional distress, auditory perceptual difficulties, cognitive distress, sleep disturbance, and intrusiveness, were extracted from the MTQ. Thirty-seven items were included. The MTQ had high test-retest reliability (Spearman correlation coefficients: 0.87-1.00). The MTQ and its subscales had good internal consistency and reliability (total α = 0.93, subscales α = 0.71-0.86). A single measure of severity can be acquired by summing the five subscale scores. The MTQ was significantly correlated with psychological distress and tinnitus-related handicap.
CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrated that the MTQ is a reliable and valid measure of tinnitus-related psychopathological symptoms and could be used clinically to evaluate tinnitus-related psychological problems. Questionnaires designed to explore tinnitus-related depression and other symptoms not covered by the scope of the MTQ are needed.

PMID: 26963398 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Comorbidities and recurrence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: personal experience.

Comorbidities and recurrence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: personal experience.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Picciotti PM, Lucidi D, De Corso E, Meucci D, Sergi B, Paludetti G

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the correlation between clinical features of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) and age, sex, trauma, presence of one or more comorbidities such as cardiovascular, neurological, endocrinological, metabolic, psychiatric diseases.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of medical records (chart review).
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 475 patients aged from 14 to 87 years, affected by BPPV.
RESULTS: Recurrence of BPPV occurred in 139/475 patients (29.2%). The recurrence rate was significantly higher in female and older patients. Comorbidities were present in 72.6% of subjects with recurrent BPPV vs. 48.9% of patients with no recurrence (p <0.01). Forty-two patients (8.8%) reported a cranial trauma as a triggering event. Post-traumatic patients showed a significantly higher persistence rate (45.2%) compared to patients affected by non-traumatic BPPV (20.5%). Recurrence rates are overlapping between the two groups.
CONCLUSION: Our results confirm the association between recurrence of BPPV and age, female sex, and presence of comorbidities. The correlation is stronger in patients affected by multiple associated diseases; the most frequently involved pathologies are psychiatric disorders, followed by neurological and vascular diseases. Collecting a complete medical history is important for prognostic stratification and detection of potential underlying pathological conditions.

PMID: 26963274 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Leigh JR, Moran M, Hollow R, Dowell RC

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Adult selection criteria for cochlear implantation have been developed based on analysis of the post-operative performance of a large group of postlingually deafened adults. Original criteria published in 2004 were reviewed and amended to reflect outcomes currently being achieved by implant recipients.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of 12-month post-operative speech perception performance of adults implanted at the Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 382 postlingually deafened adults, using a Freedom, Nucleus 5, or CI422 Slim Straight cochlear implant were used to create a comparative set of data.
RESULTS: Revised guidelines suggest that adults with postlingual hearing loss can now be considered cochlear implant candidates if they obtain scores of up to 55% for open-set phonemes in quiet in the ear to be implanted. Functional benefit may vary depending on the recipients' contralateral hearing.
CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the provision of cochlear implants to candidates with significant residual hearing when at least one ear meets the criterion outlined above. Patient-specific counseling is required to ensure the potential to benefit predicted by the current model is acceptable to the individual patient and their family. Counseling regarding functional benefit must take into consideration hearing in the contralateral ear.

PMID: 26963131 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Evidence-based guidelines for recommending cochlear implantation for postlingually deafened adults.

Int J Audiol. 2016 Mar 10;:1-6

Authors: Leigh JR, Moran M, Hollow R, Dowell RC

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Adult selection criteria for cochlear implantation have been developed based on analysis of the post-operative performance of a large group of postlingually deafened adults. Original criteria published in 2004 were reviewed and amended to reflect outcomes currently being achieved by implant recipients.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of 12-month post-operative speech perception performance of adults implanted at the Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
STUDY SAMPLE: A total of 382 postlingually deafened adults, using a Freedom, Nucleus 5, or CI422 Slim Straight cochlear implant were used to create a comparative set of data.
RESULTS: Revised guidelines suggest that adults with postlingual hearing loss can now be considered cochlear implant candidates if they obtain scores of up to 55% for open-set phonemes in quiet in the ear to be implanted. Functional benefit may vary depending on the recipients' contralateral hearing.
CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the provision of cochlear implants to candidates with significant residual hearing when at least one ear meets the criterion outlined above. Patient-specific counseling is required to ensure the potential to benefit predicted by the current model is acceptable to the individual patient and their family. Counseling regarding functional benefit must take into consideration hearing in the contralateral ear.

PMID: 26963131 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Wnt activation protects against neomycin-induced hair cell damage in the mouse cochlea.

Wnt activation protects against neomycin-induced hair cell damage in the mouse cochlea.

Cell Death Dis. 2016;7:e2136

Authors: Liu L, Chen Y, Qi J, Zhang Y, He Y, Ni W, Li W, Zhang S, Sun S, Taketo MM, Wang L, Chai R, Li H

Abstract
Recent studies have reported the role of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in hair cell (HC) development, regeneration, and differentiation in the mouse cochlea; however, the role of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in HC protection remains unknown. In this study, we took advantage of transgenic mice to specifically knockout or overactivate the canonical Wnt signaling mediator β-catenin in HCs, which allowed us to investigate the role of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in protecting HCs against neomycin-induced damage. We first showed that loss of β-catenin in HCs made them more vulnerable to neomycin-induced injury, while constitutive activation of β-catenin in HCs reduced HC loss both in vivo and in vitro. We then showed that loss of β-catenin in HCs increased caspase-mediated apoptosis induced by neomycin injury, while β-catenin overexpression inhibited caspase-mediated apoptosis. Finally, we demonstrated that loss of β-catenin in HCs led to increased expression of forkhead box O3 transcription factor (Foxo3) and Bim along with decreased expression of antioxidant enzymes; thus, there were increased levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) after neomycin treatment that might be responsible for the increased aminoglycoside sensitivity of HCs. In contrast, β-catenin overexpression reduced Foxo3 and Bim expression and ROS levels, suggesting that β-catenin is protective against neomycin-induced HC loss. Our findings demonstrate that Wnt/β-catenin signaling has an important role in protecting HCs against neomycin-induced HC loss and thus might be a new therapeutic target for the prevention of HC death.

PMID: 26962686 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]



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Cochlear Implantation in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder.

http:--pt.wkhealth.com-pt-pt-core-templa Related Articles

Cochlear Implantation in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Otol Neurotol. 2015 Sep;36(8):e121-8

Authors: Eshraghi AA, Nazarian R, Telischi FF, Martinez D, Hodges A, Velandia S, Cejas-Cruz I, Balkany TJ, Lo K, Lang D

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the outcome of cochlear implantation in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case review and survey.
SETTING: Tertiary referral center.
PATIENTS: Children who meet criteria for cochlear implantation and diagnosis of ASD.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Receptive and expressive language scores and parental survey data.
RESULTS: Fifteen patients with history of ASD and cochlear implantation were analyzed and compared with 15 patients who received cochlear implant and have no other disability. Postoperatively, more than 67% of children with ASD significantly improved their speech perception skills, and 60% significantly improved their speech expression skills, whereas all patients in the control group showed significant improvement in both aspects. The top 3 reported improvements after cochlear implantation were name recognition, response to verbal requests, and enjoyment of music. Of all behavioral aspects, the use of eye contact was the least improved. Survey results in regard to improvements in patient interaction were more subtle when compared with those related to sound and speech perception. The most improved aspects in the ASD patients' lives after cochlear implantation seemed to be attending to other people's requests and conforming to family routines. Of note, awareness of the child's environment is the most highly ranked improvement attributed to the cochlear implant.
CONCLUSION: Cochlear implants are effective and beneficial for hearing impaired members of the ASD population, although development of language may lag behind that of implanted children with no additional disabilities. Significant speech perception and overall behavior improvement are noted.

PMID: 25899551 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]



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Effect of personal music system use on sacculocollic reflex assessed by cervical vestibular-evoked myogenic potential: A preliminary investigation

Niraj Kumar Singh, Chithra Sobha Sasidharan

Noise and Health 2016 18(81):104-112

Listening to music through a portable personal music system (PMS) is a growing trend, especially among the youth. The preferred listening level in such kinds of PMS has been reported to cross the safe levels and its impact on the auditory system was demonstrated in several previous investigations. Owing to the commonality in several aspects between the auditory and the vestibular systems, it appears likely that the deleterious effects of PMS use could also be impinging on the vestibular system, which has never been investigated. The present study therefore, aimed at evaluating the effects of PMS use on the sacculocollic reflex assessed by the cervical vestibular-evoked myogenic potential (cVEMP) technique. Thirty-two regular PMS users and 32 nonregular PMS users underwent cVEMP testing using alternating polarity 500 Hz tone bursts. The results revealed no significant group difference in latencies and interaural asymmetry ratio. However, the cVEMP was significantly reduced in the group of individuals in whom the diffused field equivalent sound pressure levels (SPLs) were above the damage risk criteria (DRC) compared to those with diffused field equivalent SPLs below it (P< 0.01). Therefore, the use of PMS at high levels of volume controls could be deleterious to the vestibular well-being of an individual.

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Therapeutic role of Vitamin B12 in patients of chronic tinnitus: A pilot study

Charu Singh, Rahul Kawatra, Jaya Gupta, Vishnu Awasthi, Homnath Dungana

Noise and Health 2016 18(81):93-97

True tinnitus is a phantom auditory perception arising from a source or trigger in the cochlea, brainstem, or at higher centers and has no detectable acoustic generator. The most accepted is the famous neurophysiologic model of Jastreboff, which stresses that tinnitus, is a subcortical perception and results from the processing of weak neural activity in the periphery. The aim of this study is to determine the role of Vitamin B12 in treatment of chronic tinnitus. In this randomized, double-blind pilot study, total 40 patients were enrolled, of which 20 in Group A (cases) received intramuscular therapy of 1 ml Vitamin B12 (2500 mcg) weekly for a period of 6 weeks and Group B (20) patients received placebo isotonic saline 01 ml intramuscular. The patients were subjected to Vitamin B12 assay and audiometry pre- and post-therapy. Of the total patients of tinnitus, 17 were Vitamin B12 deficient that is 42.5% showed deficiency when the normal levels were considered to be 250 pg/ml. A paired t-test showed that in Group A, patients with Vitamin B12 deficiency showed significant improvement in mean tinnitus severity index score and visual analog scale (VAS) after Vitamin B12 therapy. This pilot study highlights the significant prevalence of Vitamin B12 deficiency in North Indian population and improvement in tinnitus severity scores and VAS in cobalamin-deficient patients receiving intramuscular Vitamin B12 weekly for 6 weeks further provides a link between cobalamin deficiency and tinnitus thereby suggestive of a therapeutic role of B12 in cobalamin-deficient patients of tinnitus.

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Comparison of direct measurement methods for headset noise exposure in the workplace

Flora G Nassrallah, Christian Giguere, Hilmi R Dajani, Nicolas N Ellaham

Noise and Health 2016 18(81):62-77

The measurement of noise exposure from communication headsets poses a methodological challenge. Although several standards describe methods for general noise measurements in occupational settings, these are not directly applicable to noise assessments under communication headsets. For measurements under occluded ears, specialized methods have been specified by the International Standards Organization (ISO 11904) such as the microphone in a real ear and manikin techniques. Simpler methods have also been proposed in some national standards such as the use of general purpose artificial ears and simulators in conjunction with single number corrections to convert measurements to the equivalent diffuse field. However, little is known about the measurement agreement between these various methods and the acoustic manikin technique. Twelve experts positioned circum-aural, supra-aural and insert communication headsets on four different measurement setups (Type 1, Type 2, Type 3.3 artificial ears, and acoustic manikin). Fit-refit measurements of four audio communication signals were taken under quiet laboratory conditions. Data were transformed into equivalent diffuse-field sound levels using third-octave procedures. Results indicate that the Type 1 artificial ear is not suited for the measurement of sound exposure under communication headsets, while Type 2 and Type 3.3 artificial ears are in good agreement with the acoustic manikin technique. Single number corrections were found to introduce a large measurement uncertainty, making the use of the third-octave transformation preferable.

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Exposure-response relationship of wind turbine noise with self-reported symptoms of sleep and health problems: A nationwide socioacoustic survey in Japan

Takayuki Kageyama, Takashi Yano, Sonoko Kuwano, Shinichi Sueoka, Hideki Tachibana

Noise and Health 2016 18(81):53-61

The association of wind turbine noise (WTN) with sleep and physical/mental health has not been fully investigated. To investigate the relationship of WTN with the prevalence of self-reported symptoms of sleep and health problems, a socioacoustic survey of 1079 adult residents was conducted throughout Japan (2010-2012): 747 in 34 areas surrounding wind turbine plants and 332 in 16 control areas. During face-to-face interviews, the respondents were not informed of the purpose of the survey. Questions on symptoms such as sleeplessness and physical/mental complaints were asked without specifying reasons. Insomnia was defined as having one or any combination of the following that occurs three or more times a week and bothers a respondent: Difficulty initiating sleep, difficulty maintaining sleep, premature morning awakening, and feeling of light overnight sleep. Poor health was defined as having high scores for health complaints, as determined using the Total Health Index, exceeding the criteria proposed by the authors of the index. The noise descriptor for WTN was LAeq,n outdoor, estimated from the results of actual measurement at some locations in each site. Multiple logistic analysis was applied to the LAeq,n and insomnia or poor health. The odds ratio (OR) of insomnia was significantly higher when the noise exposure level exceeded 40 dB, whereas the self-reported sensitivity to noise and visual annoyance with wind turbines were also independently associated with insomnia. OR of poor health was not significant for noise exposure, but significant for noise sensitivity and visual annoyance. The above two moderators appear to indicate the features of respondents who are sensitive to stimuli or changes in their homeostasis.

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Comparison of staff and family perceptions of causes of noise pollution in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit and suggested intervention strategies

Harsheen Kaur, Gina M Rohlik, Michael E Nemergut, Sandeep Tripathi

Noise and Health 2016 18(81):78-84

Noise and excessive, unwanted sound in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) is common and has a major impact on patients' sleep and recovery. Previous research has focused mostly on absolute noise levels or included only staff as respondents to acknowledge the causes of noise and to plan for its reduction. Thus far, the suggested interventions have not ameliorated noise, and it continues to serve as a barrier to recovery. In addition to surveying PICU providers through internet-based software, patients' families were evaluated through in-person interviews utilizing a pretested instrument over 3 months. Families of patients admitted for more than 24 h were considered eligible for evaluation. Participants were asked to rank causes of noise from 1 to 8, with eight being highest, and identified potential interventions as effective or ineffective. In total, 50 families from 251 admissions and 65 staff completed the survey. Medical alarms were rated highest (mean ± standard deviation [SD], 4.9 ± 2.1 [2.8-7.0]), followed by noise from medical equipment (mean ± SD, 4.7 ± 2.1 [2.5-6.8]). This response was consistent among PICU providers and families. Suggested interventions to reduce noise included keeping a patient's room door closed, considered effective by 93% of respondents (98% of staff; 88% of families), and designated quiet times, considered effective by 82% (80% of staff; 84% of families). Keeping the patient's door closed was the most effective strategy among survey respondents. Most families and staff considered medical alarms an important contributor to noise level. Because decreasing the volume of alarms such that it cannot be heard is inappropriate, alternative strategies to alert staff of changes in vital signs should be explored.

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Student's music exposure: Full-day personal dose measurements

Nilesh Jeevandas Washnik, Susan L Phillips, Sandra Teglas

Noise and Health 2016 18(81):98-103

Previous studies have shown that collegiate level music students are exposed to potentially hazardous sound levels. Compared to professional musicians, collegiate level music students typically do not perform as frequently, but they are exposed to intense sounds during practice and rehearsal sessions. The purpose of the study was to determine the full-day exposure dose including individual practice and ensemble rehearsals for collegiate student musicians. Sixty-seven college students of classical music were recruited representing 17 primary instruments. Of these students, 57 completed 2 days of noise dose measurements using Cirrus doseBadge programed according to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health criterion. Sound exposure was measured for 2 days from morning to evening, ranging from 7 to 9 h. Twenty-eight out of 57 (49%) student musicians exceeded a 100% daily noise dose on at least 1 day of the two measurement days. Eleven student musicians (19%) exceeded 100% daily noise dose on both days. Fourteen students exceeded 100% dose during large ensemble rehearsals and eight students exceeded 100% dose during individual practice sessions. Approximately, half of the student musicians exceeded 100% noise dose on a typical college schedule. This finding indicates that a large proportion of collegiate student musicians are at risk of developing noise-induced hearing loss due to hazardous sound levels. Considering the current finding, there is a need to conduct hearing conservation programs in all music schools, and to educate student musicians about the use and importance of hearing protection devices for their hearing.

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Noise and sleep on board vessels in the Royal Norwegian Navy

Erlend Sunde, Magne Bratveit, Stale Pallesen, Bente Elisabeth Moen

Noise and Health 2016 18(81):85-92

Previous research indicates that exposure to noise during sleep can cause sleep disturbance. Seamen on board vessels are frequently exposed to noise also during sleep periods, and studies have reported sleep disturbance in this occupational group. However, studies of noise and sleep in maritime settings are few. This study's aim was to examine the associations between noise exposure during sleep, and sleep variables derived from actigraphy among seamen on board vessels in the Royal Norwegian Navy (RNoN). Data were collected on board 21 RNoN vessels, where navy seamen participated by wearing an actiwatch (actigraph), and by completing a questionnaire comprising information on gender, age, coffee drinking, nicotine use, use of medication, and workload. Noise dose meters were used to assess noise exposure inside the seamen's cabin during sleep. Eighty-three sleep periods from 68 seamen were included in the statistical analysis. Linear mixed-effects models were used to examine the association between noise exposure and the sleep variables percentage mobility during sleep and sleep efficiency, respectively. Noise exposure variables, coffee drinking status, nicotine use status, and sleeping hours explained 24.9% of the total variance in percentage mobility during sleep, and noise exposure variables explained 12.0% of the total variance in sleep efficiency. Equivalent noise level and number of noise events per hour were both associated with increased percentage mobility during sleep, and the number of noise events was associated with decreased sleep efficiency.

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Call centers and noise-induced hearing loss

Ayse Coskun Beyan, Yucel Demiral, Arif Hikmet Cimrin, Alparslan Ergor

Noise and Health 2016 18(81):113-116

Noise is defined as unwelcome sound. It has been estimated that 16% of adult hearing loss in the world is due to noise exposure at the workplace. This report offers a case that diagnosed with hearing loss of whom working as a call center operator at home. Home agent operators should be explored.

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