High-Frequency Audiometry for Early Detection of Hearing Loss: A Narrative Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
- The keywords “high frequency” and “audiometry” should appear somewhere in the text of the article;
- The study includes either an unexposed population or a group exposed to workplace noise;
- The results are evaluated with statistics;
- It is possible to compare the hearing thresholds for CA and at least 5 high frequencies in the range of 9–20 kHz;
- The study is written in either English, Portuguese or Spanish.
2.3. Exclusion Criteria
3. Results
Author, Year | Number of Respondents and Study Design | Age Range (Years) and Groups | City, Country | Audiometry and Frequency Range (kHz) | Audiometer Type | Headphones | Objective | Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rodríguez Valiente et al., 2014 [17] | 645 (321 men and 324 women). No workplace noise exposure. Prospective study. | 5–90 Age groups: 5–19, 20–29, 30–39, 40–49, 50–59, 60–69, 70–90. Same number in each group. Ears not distinguished. Divided by gender. | Madrid, Spain | CA 0.125–8 HFA 8–20 | Madsen Orbiter 922, version 2, Madsen Electronics | CA: Telephonic TDH-39P HFA: Sennheiser 200 | Determine threshold values over the 0.125–20 kHz range in healthy, professional, unexposed people; try to set new standards. | In the group of people aged 20–69 years, the hearing threshold values were lower in women than in men, especially at 12.5 and 16 kHz. |
Oppitz et al., 2017 [21] | 60 (11 men and 49 women). No workplace noise exposure. Cross-sectional, prospective study. | 18–58 Age groups: 18–30, 31–58. Group 1: 49 people. Group 2: 11 people. Left and right ears. Not divided by gender. | Santa Marie, Brazil | CA 0.250–8 HFA 9–18 | Interacoustics AS10HF | CA: Telephonics TDH-39P HFA: KOSS R/80 | Evaluate high-frequency hearing thresholds and try to compare differences between the ears; verify correlation between hearing quality and aging. | There was a progressive increase in hearing thresholds above 14 kHz. The increased hearing thresholds were found in both ears and were proportional to the rising frequency and age. |
Barbosa de Sá et al., 2007 [18] | 51 (19 men and 32 women). No workplace noise exposure. Cross-sectional, prospective study. | 18–29 1 age group. Left and right ears. Divided by gender. | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | CA 0.250–8 HFA 8–18 | Amplaid 460 | CA: Telephonics 236D 100-1 HFA: Sennheiser HD 520 II | Analyze results related to high-frequency hearing thresholds in individuals aged 18–29 years without otological problems. | There were no significant differences in hearing thresholds between men and women aged 18–29 years. Significant differences in hearing thresholds between the left and right ears were found only at 11–12 kHz. Over 16 kHz, hearing thresholds increased bilaterally. |
Kumar et al., 2016 [19] | 100 30 (10 men and 20 women), 70 people using PLDs (22 men and 48 women). Study design unknown. | 15–30 1 age group. Ears not distinguished. Not divided by gender. | New Delhi, India | CA 0.125–8 HFA 9–20 | Labat Audiolab Audiometer | CA/HFA: Sennheiser HDA 300 | Examine changes in HFA hearing thresholds in PLD users and compare them with an unexposed group. | Using a PLD for more than 5 years at a high volume led to significantly increased hearing thresholds at 3, 10 and 13 kHz. |
Le Prell et al., 2013 [20] | 87 (34 men and 53 women) using PLDs. Retrospective analysis. | 18–31 1 age group. Left and right ears. Divided by gender. | Florida, USA | CA 0.250–8 HFA 10–16 | Grason-Stadler model 61 (GSI 61) | CA: EAR 3A HFA: Sennheiser HDA200 | Determine whether HFA thresholds for university students differ depending on exposure to recreational noise. | Subjects who used a PLD over the long term (5 years or more) showed statistically significant threshold differences (3–6 dB higher) at the highest frequencies tested (10–16 kHz). |
Author, Year | Number of Respondents and Study Design | Age Range (Years) and Groups | City, Country | Audiometry and Frequency Range (kHz) | Audiometer Type | Headphones | Objective | Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maccá et al., 2014 [27] | 24 EG ultrasound (2 men and 22 women), 113 EG (93 men and 20 women) 148 CG (62 men and 86 women). Study design unknown. | 15–59 Age groups: 15–19, 20–29, 30–39, 40–49, 50–59. Ears not distinguished. Not divided by gender. | Padua, Italy | CA 0.125–8 HFA 9–18 | Labat Audiopack audiometer | CA: Standard headphones HFA: Sennheiser, HD 500 | Investigate the effects of age, ultrasound and noise on high-frequency hearing thresholds. | After stratification for age, there was a significantly higher hearing threshold in EG than CG at 9–10 and 14–15 kHz only for those under 30 years of age. |
Mehrparvar et al., 2014 [22] | 142 EG 121 CG Only men. Cross-sectional, prospective study. | <50 1 age group. Left and right ears. Only men. | City unknown, Iran | CA 0.5–8 HFA 10–16 | Interacoustic AC40 | CA: TDH 39 HFA. Koss R/80 | Compare three methods of assessing hearing loss due to noise (HFA, CA, DPOAE) | The most commonly affected frequencies with statistically significantly higher hearing thresholds in EG compared with CG were 4 and 6 kHz in CA and 14 and 16 kHz in HFA. HFA was the most sensitive test for detection of hearing loss in workers exposed to >85 dBA noise. |
Mehrparvar et al., 2011 [28] | 120 EG (108 men and 12 women) 120 CG (106 men and 14 women). Historic cohort. | <50 1 age group. Left and right ears. Not divided by gender. | City unknown, Iran | CA 0.250–8 HFA 10–16 | Interacoustic AC40 | CA: TDH 39 HFA: Koss R/80 | Compare thresholds with both CA and HFA in both ears in exposed and unexposed individuals to assess the efficiency of the methods when revealing hearing loss. | Statistically significantly higher mean hearing thresholds in EG compared with CG were found at 4, 6 and 16 kHz, with the most significant differences found at 16 kHz in both ears. |
Ma et al., 2018 [23] | 134 EG 101 CG Only men. Cross-sectional study. | 20–59 Age groups: 20–29, 30–39, 40–49 50–59. Ears not distinguished. Only men. | City unknown, China | CA 0.250–8 HFA 9–20 | Madsen Conera | CA: TDH–39 HFA: Sennheiser HDA 200 | Investigate the usefulness of HFA as an assessment test of the hearing statuses of civilian pilots. | Statistically significantly higher mean hearing thresholds in EG compared with CG were found at most of the high frequencies tested. In particular, the largest differences between hearing thresholds were found at 16 kHz for subjects aged 20–29 and 30–39, at 12.5 kHz for those aged 40–49 years old and at 10 kHz for those aged 50–59 years old. |
Ahmed et al., 2001 [24] | 187 EG 52 CG Only men. Cross-sectional study. | Undefined–44 Age groups: <25, 25–34, 35–44. Ears not distinguished. Only men. | City unknown, Saudi Arabia | CA 0.250-8 HFA 10–18 | Interacoustics AS10HF | CA: Koss HV-1A HFA: TDH-50P | Investigate the reliability and effects of age and noise on HFA hearing thresholds. | A multivariate analysis showed that the primary indicator of the hearing threshold at high frequencies is age, and noise exposure is a secondary predictor of hearing thresholds at high frequencies (10–18 kHz). |
Somma et al., 2008 [25] | 84 EG 98 CG Only men. Study design unknown. | 21–60 Age groups: 21–30, 31–40, 41–50, 51–60. Ears not distinguished. Only men. | City unknown, Italy | CA 0.250-8 HFA 9–18 | Amplaid A319, Amplifon | CA: TDH-49 HFA: Sennheiser HDA 200 | Compare HFA and CA to assess thresholds among workers exposed to workplace noise. | Statistically significantly higher hearing thresholds between EG and CG were found for those aged 21–30 years old at all frequencies (9–18 kHz) and for those aged 31–40 years old at frequencies of 9–14 kHz. |
Korres et al., 2008 [29] | 139 EG (68 men and 53 women) 32 CG (18 men and 14 women). Study design unknown. | 24–55 1 age group. Left and right ears. Not divided by gender. | City unknown, Greece | CA 0.250-8 HFA 9–20 | Amplaid 321, Twinchannel | CA: TDH-49 HFA: Sennheiser HDA 200 | Evaluate hearing in industrial workers exposed to workplace noise using CA and HFA and compare it with CG. | Statistically significantly higher hearing thresholds between EG and CG were found at 4–18 kHz, especially at 12.5–18 kHz. A statistically significant correlation between an increased duration of exposure and higher hearing thresholds was found at all frequencies except for 10 kHz. |
Rocha et al., 2010 [26] | 47 EG 33 CG Only men. Cross-sectional, retrospective cohort study. | 30–49 Age groups: 30–39, 40–49. Ears not distinguished. Only men. | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | CA 0.250-8 HFA 9–20 | Interacoustic AC40 | CA: TDH-39P HFA: Koss HV/PRO | Analysis of HFA results in people exposed to noise with normal results for CA. | The EG had a statistically significantly higher hearing threshold than CG at 16 kHz in participants aged 30–39 years. The results were most significant in the 40–49 years age group, where EG showed significantly higher hearing thresholds than CG at 14 and 16 kHz. |
Goncalves et al., 2015 [30] | 40 EG (10 men and 32 women) CG 40 Historic cohort study. | 23–61 1 age group. Left and right ears. Divided by gender. | Curitiba, Brazil | CA 0.5–8 HFA 9–16 | Madsen Itera II, GN Otometrics | CA: Standard HFA: Sennheiser HDA 200 | Use HFA to evaluate hearing among dentists exposed to workplace noise for varying durations. | Statistically significantly higher hearing thresholds in EG compared with CG were observed at 0.5, 1, 6 and 8 kHz in the right ear. No differences were observed between the EG and CG for high frequencies. |
Antonioli et al., 2016 [31] | Exposed workers and unexposed people. Both genders. Systematic review, meta–analysis. | 18–60 Different age groups. Ears not distinguished. Not divided by gender. 6 studies | Many countries | CA 0.250–8 HFA 10–20 | Interacoustics AS10HF; Amplaid A3 19; Amplaid A321; Interacoustic AC 40; Siemens SD50; GSI 61 | HFA: Koss R/80; HDA200; R80; HDA200; HD 200; TDH-39p | Retrospective and secondary systematic revision of publications using HFA to monitor the hearing of workers exposed to workplace noise. | At 16 kHz, HFA is sensitive enough for the early detection of hearing loss. This is true for 4 kHz as well, but the outcome is not as significant. Further studies are therefore needed to confirm the importance of HFA for the early detection of hearing loss in people exposed to workplace noise. |
3.1. Studies with People Not Exposed to Workplace Noise
3.2. Studies on Workplace Noise Exposure
3.3. Limitations
- Only a few published studies have used HFA to determine hearing thresholds in an unexposed population, and even fewer studies have compared cohorts exposed and unexposed to workplace noise;
- The different age groups considered in the existing studies have varying age ranges. Some studies have reported hearing thresholds independently of age, even though the hearing threshold worsens with age at each frequency;
- The standards for hearing loss classification and their corresponding audiometry values have not yet been defined for frequencies other than 0.125–8 kHz.
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Škerková, M.; Kovalová, M.; Mrázková, E. High-Frequency Audiometry for Early Detection of Hearing Loss: A Narrative Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 4702. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094702
Škerková M, Kovalová M, Mrázková E. High-Frequency Audiometry for Early Detection of Hearing Loss: A Narrative Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(9):4702. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094702
Chicago/Turabian StyleŠkerková, Michaela, Martina Kovalová, and Eva Mrázková. 2021. "High-Frequency Audiometry for Early Detection of Hearing Loss: A Narrative Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 9: 4702. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094702
APA StyleŠkerková, M., Kovalová, M., & Mrázková, E. (2021). High-Frequency Audiometry for Early Detection of Hearing Loss: A Narrative Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(9), 4702. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094702