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Types of presbycusis
100

Consists of pinna and external auditory meatus 

Outer ear 

100

Smallest bone in the human body 

Stapes

100

Tympanic membrane; ossicles; chain from tympanic membrane to inner ear; moves back and forth when sound hits it; different pitches move membrane more or less; sends a signal to inner ear 

Middle ear 

100

Problem transferring sound waves anywhere along pathway from the outer ear, tympanic membrane, or middle ear 

Conductive 

100

Atrophy and degeneration of stria vascularis. Arteriosclerotic vascular changes. Uniform reduction. 

Strial presbycusis 

200

Hearing and balance take place here 

Inner ear 

200

Name the ossicles 

Malleus, stapes, incus 

200

Cochlea; fluid and hair cells inside 

Hearing 
200

Normal age related hearing loss; by age 65, 1/3 of population has loss; bilateral; gradual 

Presbycusis 

200

Epithelial atrophy and degeneration of hair cells. High frequency affected. 

Sensory presbycusis 

300

Sounds enter the external auditory meatus --> ossicles move --> cause fluid to move --> triggers hair cells --> convert to electrical signals --> to auditory N. --> to brain 

This is how we hear... duhh 
300

Semicircular canals, utricle and saccule 

Balance 

300

Types of age related hearing loss

Conductive, sensorimotor and mixed 

300

Outside ear; sound enters; determine where sound comes from; cartilage and soft tissue 

Pinna 

300

Disorder in the motion mechanism of the cochlear duct. High pitched consonants affects words beginning with s,t,g, and f 

Cochlear conductive presbycusis 

400

Cause in inner ear or sensory organs; vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII); auditory N; brain auditory cortex - temporal N 

Sensorimotor related hearing loss

400

Treatment is increasing intensity of sound by speaking louder or mechanical amplification 

Conductive hearing loss

400

Inner ear damage; louder sounds may be unclear or may sound muffled; soft sounds may be hard to hear; most common type of permanent hearing loss

Sensorimotor hearing loss

400

Medicine or surgery cannot fix this issue; hearing aids MAY help 

Sensorimotor hearing loss

400

Degeneration of nerve fibers in cochlea and neuron loss along auditory pathway. Speech discrimination, tone is spared. 

Words that sound alike will be confused. 

Neural presbycusis 

500

Causes can be fluid in middle ear, ear infections, poor eustachian tube function, hole in eardrum, benign tumors, cerumen in ear canal, external otitis, object stuck in outer ear, deficits in outer or middle ear formation 

Causes of conductive hearing loss

500

Genetic or non-genetic factors; nongenetic factors - 25% of congenital hearing loss

Congenital hearing loss

500

Maternal infections (rubella, cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus), prematurity, low birth weight, birth injuries, toxins (drugs, alcohol consumed during pregnancy), complications associated with Rh factor, maternal diabetes, toxemia during pregnancy, anoxia 

Nongenetic factors known to cause congenital hearing loss

500

Genetic factors/hereditary hearing loss is ___%

50% 

500

Causes are illness, hereditary hearing loss, aging, head trauma, inner ear formation deficit, ototoxic medications, listening to loud noises or explosions 

Causes of sensorimotor hearing loss

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