![]() ![]() ![]() Fortunately there is a way to overdrive the poorly functioning nerve with sounds which are clear enough to support the development of speech and language during critical period for speech and language learning early in the child’s life. Unfortunately, simple amplification of incoming sounds with hearing aids does not seem to help anymore than turning up a broken loud speaker. There is no medication currently known that can improve or speed the improvement of the health of the auditory nerve which has auditory neuropathy. This is very important because so much of early speech and language development happens early in life and incomplete learning cannot easily be corrected later. Recently, it has become apparent that simple acoustic reflex testing which is often done routinely in adults but not in children, and can be done by most audiologists, can be helpful because these normal reflexes are uniformly absent in children with auditory neuropathy.Īuditory neuropathy may improve spontaneously but the chances of significant improvement after the first two years of life are small. The result is that the child with auditory neuropathy hears so poorly that they may never learn to speak intelligibly. A standardized form of testing called brainstem evoked response audiometry (BERA) or auditory brainstem response (ABR) will show that the characteristic waves associated with sound conduction down the cochlear nerve are not well formed. Only the doctor and audiologists suspicions that a problem may be present lead to further testing which can confirm that sound transmitted through the hearing nerve becomes desynchronized. A hearing test (behavioral or play audiometry) which records the child’s responses to sounds may be normal and special testing of the hair cells of the inner ear are usually normal. This is the unique character of auditory neuropathy that is the most difficult to understand. An appointment with a hearing specialist is usually arranged and when routine hearing testing is performed it is found to be normal. The result is that a child will react to sound and give no evidence to the parents that there is a hearing problem until it becomes clear at two years of age or older that despite hearing sounds, no speech has developed. If the auditory nerve has neuropathy, a child may be aware of sounds but the signal will be very poor like a very poor and unintelligible telephone connection. The problem is in the cochlear nerve itself and its inability to clearly transmit sounds received by the inner ear to the brain where hearing and interpreting of speech actually occurs. Auditory neuropathy is a unique disorder of hearing in which the inner ear itself may be perfectly normal but speech cannot be heard clearly enough for a child to develop normal speech and language.
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