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16 september 2019 20:00:44

 
288 Hearing Loss as a Potentially Modifiable Risk Factor in People with Mild Cognitive Symptoms Attending a Specialist Memory Service (Age and Ageing)
 


AbstractBackgroundPeople with mild hearing loss at age 50 are twice as likely to develop dementia increasing to a five times greater risk for those with severe hearing loss. The prevalence of dementia and hearing impairment increase with age. Intact hearing enables cognition, facilitates social interaction and enhances communication. Hearing loss, social isolation and dementia are commonly interwoven. We recently commenced routine audiology screening in our memory service.MethodsConsecutive patients with mild cognitive impairment attending a tertiary memory assessment and support service were referred for full audiology screening. People were routinely referred on basis of cognitive diagnosis, and not on the basis of perceived hearing loss. Assessment included ENT history, otoscopy, tympanometry, pure tone audiometry and speech audiometry to determine the presence, type and amount of any hearing loss present. This included speech discrimination testing - a functional test to determine processing of 10 phonetically balanced words with 100% being an optimal response.Results20 people (12 women), mean age 72.3 (range 57-87) were assessed. The majority had amnestic MCI 18/20 (90%). 9/20 (45%) patients subjectively complained of hearing loss. 7/20 (35%) had history of occupational noise exposure. 12/20 (60%) had occlusion due to ear wax.Hearing loss identified: Mild 8/20 (40%); Moderate to severe 7/20 (35%); with Normal hearing in 5/20 (25%). High frequency hearing loss was noted in 19/20 (95%). Speech discrimination score was impaired in those with hearing loss: mean 89.4% (range 66-100). 6/20 (30%) received referral for hearing aids.ConclusionThis study highlights the importance of incorporating an assessment of auditory acuity as part of memory assessment and post-diagnostic care-pathway for people with mild cognitive complaints given the established impact hearing loss has on the future risk for cognitive decline. Hearing loss is frequently unidentified and is a clear modifiable risk factor to promote brain health.


 
216 viewsCategory: Geriatrics, Medicine, Pathology
 
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