학술논문

Effect of transducer placements on thresholds in ears with an abnormal ear canal and severe conductive hearing loss
Document Type
Report
Source
Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology. December 2021, Vol. 6 Issue 6, p1429, 7 p.
Subject
Canada
Japan
Language
English
Abstract
INTRODUCTION A loud sound is audible when a transducer is attached to the aural cartilage (particularly, the tragus).[sup.1,2] Three theoretical components, namely cartilage bone conduction (BC), cartilage air conduction (AC), [...]
: Objectives: Providing hearing compensation to patients with aural atresia is considerably challenging. Hearing aid transducers vibrating the aural cartilage (cartilage conduction; CC) have been devised, and hearing aids utilizing them (CC hearing aids) have quickly become a beneficial option for aural atresia in clinical applications. However, it remains unclear which placement (on the aural cartilage or mastoid) is beneficial to signal transmission. Methods: This study included 35 patients (53 ears with an abnormal ear canal and severe conductive hearing loss) who were using CC hearing aids. Thresholds were compared between the transducers on the aural cartilage and on the mastoid. Results: In ears with bony aural atresia, thresholds were significantly improved when the transducer was placed on the aural cartilage compared to when it was placed on the mastoid for frequencies ≤ 500 Hz (P Conclusion: Our findings demonstrated that placing the transducer at the aural cartilage improved the mid‐to‐low frequency thresholds compared to mastoid transduction in aural atretic ears. In contrast, no clear improvement to the signal transmission due to the transducer's placement on the aural cartilage was recognized in non‐atretic ears. Level of Evidence: 2