Guest guest Posted February 13, 2004 Report Share Posted February 13, 2004 Hi Leigh, Truthfully I have no experience with a baby with a heraing loss so I don't know if this will help. I do have one daughter with a fluctuating now profound loss. Her older sister was just diagnosed as well. Her hearing fluctuates so often it really depends on the day, literally she can have normal hearing one day and a mild-mod loss the next, then back to normal. She also had normal abr's so now they fell that was one of her good hearing days. Maybe a hearing loss trial would be a good thing just to see if they help and if you notice an improvement. That is what we are doing with my daughter. She is trying digital aids with 3 programs, of course the biggest difference is she is old enough to change the programs herself depending on her hearing. Good luck, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 13, 2004 Report Share Posted February 13, 2004 Ok I first would like to know if your daughter has had an audiogram lately and how she did if so. Second I want to make a point that what you are talking about while confusing may not be an inacuracy. In other words it may be that your daughter has a condition such as cortical deafness where the brain isn't processing the sound and that she doesn't usually respond to most sounds because it is just noise. People with this disorder have anywhere from normal audiograms to profound loss, but that doesn't mean they don't hear the sound. So in other words she may be hearing the sound but because all it is is noise like rushing water or static, she doesn't respond to it. she may hear and understand better at different dB levels. You could try a hearing aid but it may or may not help. I am interested also in finding out what the ABR showed as far as the timing of the sound goes. Were her latencies normal? My son has normal audiograms but doesn't respond to most things in the environment, so in other words he acts profoundly deaf yet his audiograms are normal, but only if they point out the toys first. if they don't first show him the moving toy he won't respond to the sound, but as soon as he knows that when he hears a sound they make a toy flash he starts responding to the sound. Why? Because suddenly the sound that is just noise that he usually hears a lot of throughout the day because everything sounds like that has a benefit to him. The sound doesn't mean anything but he learns that if he looks they will flash a toy for him. Sometimes he looks when there is no sound too. the ABR shows severe delay in his latencies which again show that his sound is distorted, and he only hears to 30 dB in the high frequencies. So there are conditions where you can have anywhere from a normal to a profound loss in the booth and a perfectly normal ABR but yet they can hear which is why the ABR shows that her hearing is normal. She may be able to hear the sound but it may not mean anything to her so she doesn't respond to it until it is really really loud. Do you understand? That doesn't mean the ABR is inaccurate it just means that your daughter may have something more cortically based then the actual ear. It causes the same result though which is they have little comprehension of sound. The sound also may be more clear in the higher dB levels. > >Reply-To: Listen-Up >To: Listen-Up >Subject: Accuracy of ABR - kinda long, sorry >Date: Fri, 13 Feb 2004 15:16:17 -0000 > _________________________________________________________________ Keep up with high-tech trends here at " Hook'd on Technology. " http://special.msn.com/msnbc/hookedontech.armx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 13, 2004 Report Share Posted February 13, 2004 Hello Leigh, I have just rejoined the list after being away for some time. It is great to be back. :-) I am the mom of three kids, Camille, and Kendra who is profoundly deaf and has had a multitude of medical difficulties, now mostly resolved. She is also considered to have autism. I noticed something in your e-mail that caught my eye. If your daughter is being considered for an evaluation for PDD while the processing or other issues are being thought about, there is a condition you may wish to investigate. Have you ever heard of hyperlexia? This condition often results in early reading and a fascination with letters. You mentioned almost an obsession with the alphabet and some advanced skills in other areas, which raised my curiosity about the possibility of this condition. Some children with hyperlexia are on the autism spectrum, but it is not a definite requirement in this diagnois. Sometimes children with this condition read before they speak. They often have a fascination with letters or numbers. They can have an inordinate amount of difficulty acquiring verbal language, and in some cases they may appear deaf. You can read more about hyperlexia at http://www.hyperlexia.org Our daughter has some of the characteristics of this condition, but not all. She could read printed words before she communicated in sign. In fact, language is still the area in which she still requires direct teaching and assistance. You are wise also to be seeking information about the nature of any possible hearing loss and confirming the results of the ABR. Southern California Message: 8 Date: Fri, 13 Feb 2004 15:16:17 -0000 Subject: Accuracy of ABR - kinda long, sorry Hi Everyone Havent posted in a really long time. My name is Leigh and my daughter is Ellie, 27 months. Last time I posted she was about 18 months and had been testing in the booth at about a 40-60 db loss - they assumed it was sn in nature...Two different booth tests reflected this loss, however in one of them she did have some middle ear fluid. She was completely clear of middle ear fluid for the second and more comprehensive test done at our local Children's Hospital. Her ABR however demonstrated that she had perfect hearing. I left feeling very confused as the middle ear fluid on top of a mild/mod sn hearing loss really explained everything we were seeing with her (never responded when we called from behind, never used speech to get what she wanted or needed and spoke very little). We began working with Early Intervention the week following the ABR and Ellie made amazing progress over this past summer with the number of words she has (and BTW we work with one of the therapists who works in the deaf/HOH program - she agreed to take my daughter on due to her previous documented hearing loss, and she's been truly wonderful and I attribute our daughter's success to her methods of re-engaging her...she had really been in her own little world)...her enunciation is fairly good and she can identify just about anything under the sun when she wants. HOWEVER, our biggest concern (and she seems to be an enigma to most who meet her) is that she still cannot (and we dont believe it's " wont " ....in other words this isnt a " two " thing as some folks try to tell me)follow the simplest one-step commands. We know she's hearing and she's been free from middle ear fluild for nearly one year. I hadnt even thought about hearing loss as something that might be still going on, until the other day when our therapist said " this goes against much of what we know in deaf education, but it just seems like a low-level hearing aid might be of some assistance to her " .....I should also add, however, that Ellie has shown some other odd behavior - for awhile, obsessing about the alphabet, then numbers and now shapes. She can count to 20 and by two's, knows the entire alphabet inside and out, and every shape under the sun, but when asked to get a pair of shoes, might bring you the toothbrush. She'll be eval'd by someone Mon who specializes more in PDD type diagnoses and processing disorders - she's got so many traits of CAPD EXCEPT for the sequencing/memorization (which is supposedely not a strong suit amongst those with CAPD)...I also might mention that our beautiful daughter came to us thru adoption so we didnt have the privilege of sharing her first 6 months, but do have really good info on her birthmom, who supposedely had excellent medical care during her pregnancy, and Ellie was born with no probs whatsoever and was 8.6 lbs..On one of my other lists - an developmental delay list for adopted children, someone did mention that despite the ABR continually indicating that her son's hearing in one ear is fine, he repeatedely tests poorly in the booth and they have seen tremendous improvement once he was aided and in therapy. Anyway, I'm just curious if anyone has seen inaccuracies with the ABR...It was done at one of the most reputable Children's Hospitals in CA, but I realize mistakes happen even at the best facilities. Any thoughts? After Mondays' eval, we'll probably be seeing a Dev. Peds and possibly a neurologist, and repeating the booth test with our therapist as second tester....just want to cover all our bases. Our daughter is just the sweetest, most precious little one and we want her to have the best. And she's so amazingly talented in so many areas of life (her athletic abilities are incredible...her OT couldnt believe all she could do for her age), but if she cant follow directions, things are gonna be tough. Anyway, thanks so much for listening and any ideas about the ABR would be much appreciated. Leigh Proud mom to Jee Hoon (3) and Elisha Sung Hee (2) both born in Korea Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 14, 2004 Report Share Posted February 14, 2004 Hi...I'm the mom that Leigh refers to in her email (the mom from the developmental delays yahoogroups). BTW Leigh...I'm still trying to pull Sammy's recent audiogram and his ABR, but, uh lets just say, I'm in a disorganized state right now ;-) Here's what I don't get about the ABR, and hopefully someone could help me with this......When Sam had his ABR in Fall 2002, it showed profound loss in the left ear, and " essentially " normal hearing in the right. The audiologist basically told us, " he'll be fine...he has one good ear " and sent us on our way. We had the test done at a very good hospital with pediatric audiology team (The Cleveland Clinic) and we assumed they knew what they were doing. For the ABR, he was tested in the 500-4000HZ range. Sam wasn't fine, though. And we persisted. He's now in AV Therapy with Carol Flexer's students at the University of Akron. When Dr. Flexer does the booth test, she tests Sam in the 250-6000HZ range, and it turns out...the ear that the ABR showed as essentially normal is, but ONLY in the ranges they tested during the ABR. Sam has a moderate hearing loss at 250HZ, 20-25 db thresholds from 500-4000HZ, and then a severe loss at 600HZ. Given that so many speech sounds are in the very low and high frequencies, it just ASTOUNDS me that the ABR didn't test there. Why is that? I feel like I wasted worry, time, resources and money and worst of all put my son under sedation for a test that was incomplete. Leigh mentioned that her daughter's ABR tested in the same frequencies, so my totally amateur guess was that maybe Ellie is like Sam and has the odd shaped hearing loss that wasn't detected in the ABR, but is being picked up in real life situations? If anyone has any incite into this testing discrepency, I'd love toe hear more. Thank you! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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