Guest guest Posted May 11, 2004 Report Share Posted May 11, 2004 In a message dated 5/11/2004 9:25:17 AM Eastern Daylight Time, Mickeyand@... writes: Hi, I have a quick question. My daughter who has moderate hearing loss had a hearing test yesterday. 6 month ago she had a drop in hearing 20db in left ear and 10db in right ear. So we are closely monitoring her ever 3 months. When this drop occurred they did not reprogram her hearing aids because they said she is receiving good reception at those levels? But at yesterdays test she only had a 5 db difference in each ear (which could be tester or teste). They want to reprogram some tones. My question or concern or maybe my lack of experience. How do they determine when to program the aids and wouldn't too much volume damage more hearing? I am scheduled to go in June because not to many places know how to program digital hearing aid or do not have the program to do this. That's another concern, a lot of places do not know how to program the aids and I am afraid my daughter can be there practice person and hurt my daughter hearing in the long run. She is 9 yrs old and it is still hard for her to distinguish what is good in sounds and she totally relies on the audiologist and me. Sorry so long... Thanks My guess (and I am not an audiologist, just a mom) is that they chose not to change the settings when that drop occurred just in case it was due to some temporary thing (fluid in the ears). Having done another test they can see that there is a significant drop and it has not rebounded, so they're choosing to re-set the levels now. However, this is just my guess because we've had siomilar things happen with our son Ian. His loss would steadily drop a few dbs each time we went to the audi. Then on one occassion he suddenly lost 20 dbs in his " good ear. " They didn't see any fluid, but thought it might be partially doe to congestion and his allergies. We went back a couple months later and his hearing was almost the same, the loss was real not transient. Since then he has had a marked drop every now and then. We don't know why, it just happens. Best -- jill. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2004 Report Share Posted May 11, 2004 In a message dated 5/11/2004 9:25:17 AM Eastern Daylight Time, Mickeyand@... writes: Hi, I have a quick question. My daughter who has moderate hearing loss had a hearing test yesterday. 6 month ago she had a drop in hearing 20db in left ear and 10db in right ear. So we are closely monitoring her ever 3 months. When this drop occurred they did not reprogram her hearing aids because they said she is receiving good reception at those levels? But at yesterdays test she only had a 5 db difference in each ear (which could be tester or teste). They want to reprogram some tones. My question or concern or maybe my lack of experience. How do they determine when to program the aids and wouldn't too much volume damage more hearing? I am scheduled to go in June because not to many places know how to program digital hearing aid or do not have the program to do this. That's another concern, a lot of places do not know how to program the aids and I am afraid my daughter can be there practice person and hurt my daughter hearing in the long run. She is 9 yrs old and it is still hard for her to distinguish what is good in sounds and she totally relies on the audiologist and me. Sorry so long... Thanks My guess (and I am not an audiologist, just a mom) is that they chose not to change the settings when that drop occurred just in case it was due to some temporary thing (fluid in the ears). Having done another test they can see that there is a significant drop and it has not rebounded, so they're choosing to re-set the levels now. However, this is just my guess because we've had siomilar things happen with our son Ian. His loss would steadily drop a few dbs each time we went to the audi. Then on one occassion he suddenly lost 20 dbs in his " good ear. " They didn't see any fluid, but thought it might be partially doe to congestion and his allergies. We went back a couple months later and his hearing was almost the same, the loss was real not transient. Since then he has had a marked drop every now and then. We don't know why, it just happens. Best -- jill. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2004 Report Share Posted May 11, 2004 I was wondering what kind of hearing loss she has. If it is SN or AN then it is likely that the clearity of sound is fluctuating and that she isn't responding sometimes and is others. Does she seem to have good days and bad days? My son currently is using visual reinforcement audiogram but we are working with him on the play audiogram because visual reinforcement is very behavioral and requires a lot of interpretation, which leaves a large margin for error. I'm sure your daughter being 9 doesn't use visual reinforcement, but I'm wondering if you are getting mixed reports if it wouldn't be a good idea to have an ABR. This might clearify things a bit for you. This doesn't rely on interpretation or her behavior to get a good reading. She does have to lay still and quiet while the test is being done. They often put babies to sleep. This is generally used for those with AN or babies or children who don't cooperate like my son, but can be used when you can't get a clear straight answer from the audiograms. I have one more question and I promise that is it, is your audiologist a pediatric audiologist? If not that may be the problem. If they are not used to dealing with children they can often misinterpret the results, or not able to test them properly. re-programing digital hearing aids Hi, I have a quick question. My daughter who has moderate hearing loss had a hearing test yesterday. 6 month ago she had a drop in hearing 20db in left ear and 10db in right ear. So we are closely monitoring her ever 3 months. When this drop occurred they did not reprogram her hearing aids because they said she is receiving good reception at those levels? But at yesterdays test she only had a 5 db difference in each ear (which could be tester or teste). They want to reprogram some tones. My question or concern or maybe my lack of experience. How do they determine when to program the aids and wouldn't too much volume damage more hearing? I am scheduled to go in June because not to many places know how to program digital hearing aid or do not have the program to do this. That's another concern, a lot of places do not know how to program the aids and I am afraid my daughter can be there practice person and hurt my daughter hearing in the long run. She is 9 yrs old and it is still hard for her to distinguish what is good in sounds and she totally relies on the audiologist and me. Sorry so long... Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 13, 2004 Report Share Posted May 13, 2004 In a message dated 5/11/2004 8:35:53 AM Pacific Standard Time, enriquez16@... writes: I have one more question and I promise that is it, is your audiologist a pediatric audiologist? Yes, They specialize in children only. This is a school based audiologist. Meaning they check any and or all children that might have a hearing problems. I have gone to other audiologist to confirm there results and they are on the money. Many ENT highly recommend and rely on there expertise. So I am pretty conformable with there testing. But I am still a little concerned on programing. Her hearing aids are Oticon digi focus II. Also, what is a ABR exactly? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 13, 2004 Report Share Posted May 13, 2004 Well that is good that you are very comfortable in their expertise. I can understand your being nervous though. An ABR is an Auditory Brain Response, or another word for it is BAER which is a Brain Auditory Evoked Response. This is how they test very young children who can't do behavioral testing or children who behaviorally or developementally can't do booth testing. Also there are some conditions such as Auditory neuropathy where although the person hears the sound it is so delayed that the sound doesn't register on the ABR. That can cause a serious problem with the clearity of sound. Those children usually have anywhere from some degree of difficulty hearing to not being able to understand anything that is heard, and so sound basically means nothing to them. Anyway the audiogram is not a relyable test for most of these people so ABR's are performed. Re: re-programing digital hearing aids In a message dated 5/11/2004 8:35:53 AM Pacific Standard Time, enriquez16@... writes: I have one more question and I promise that is it, is your audiologist a pediatric audiologist? Yes, They specialize in children only. This is a school based audiologist. Meaning they check any and or all children that might have a hearing problems. I have gone to other audiologist to confirm there results and they are on the money. Many ENT highly recommend and rely on there expertise. So I am pretty conformable with there testing. But I am still a little concerned on programing. Her hearing aids are Oticon digi focus II. Also, what is a ABR exactly? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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