Audiography:
Definition:
Audiology tests your ability to hear sounds.
Sounds vary according to the intensity (volume or loudness) and the tone (the
speed of sound wave vibrations). Hearing occurs when sound waves are conducted
to the nerves of the inner ear and from there to the brain. Sound waves can
travel to the inner ear by air conduction (through the ear canal, eardrum, and
bones of the inner ear) or bone conduction (through the bones around and behind
the ear).
The intensity of sound is measured in decibels (dB). A whisper is about 20 dB,
loud music (some concerts) is around 80 to 120 dB, and a jet engine is about
140 to 180 dB. Usually, sounds greater than 85 dB can cause hearing loss in a
few hours; louder sounds can cause immediate pain, and hearing loss can develop
in a very short time.
The tone of sound is measured in cycles per second (cps) or Hertz. Low bass
tones range around 50 to 60 hz, while shrill, high -
pitched tones range around 10,000 Hz or higher. The normal range of human
hearing is about 16 Hz to 16,000 Hz. Some people can hear within a
slightly higher range, and animals can hear up to about 50,000 Hz.
How the Test is
Performed
General screening may be
used to estimate the need for audiography. Specific
procedures may vary, but they generally involve occluding one ear at a time and
checking for the ability to hear whispers and then spoken words or the sound of
a ticking watch. A tuning fork may be used to test your general ability to hear
by air conduction and bone conduction. The tuning fork is tapped and held in
the air on each side of the head to test the ability to hear by air conduction.
It is tapped and placed against the mastoid bone behind each ear to test bone
conduction.
Audiography
provides a more precise measurement of hearing. Air conduction is tested by
having you wear earphones attached to the audiometer. Pure tones of controlled
intensity are delivered, usually to one ear at a time. You are asked to
indicate (by raising a hand, pressing a button, or other means) when they hear
a sound, and the minimum intensity (volume) required to hear each tone is
graphed. An attachment is placed against the bone behind each ear to test bone
conduction.
Why the test is
performed:
This may be a screening
test to detect a hearing loss
at an early stage. It may also be used when there is difficulty in hearing from
any cause. Common causes of hearing loss include chronic ear
infections, a ruptured
eardrum, acoustic
trauma, an occupational hearing
loss, a head
injury, inherited conditions, diseases of the inner ear, and complications
of ototoxic medications (medications that can be
toxic to the nerve of the inner ear, including certain antibiotics such as
neomycin, diuretics such as Lasix, and large doses of
salicylates such as aspirin).