Results 311 to 320 of about 431,763 (337)
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Disorders of hearing and balance

Reviews in Clinical Gerontology, 1993
The cochleovestibular system is unique in that the peripheral labyrinth subserves two senses, hearing and balance, while the central auditory and vestibular connections diverge within the central nervous system and interact with a multiplicity of information from other sensory inputs.
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Genes related to hearing disorders

Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 2004
The inner ear is a highly specialized organ and the mechanisms of its function are complex and have not yet fully been elucidated. For example, there are questions such as how the stereocilia characteristics of hair cells are regularly arranged, how the reactions of stereocilia and ion channels of hair cells to sound are controlled, and how the ion ...
Juichi Ito   +2 more
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Hearing Loss in Mitochondrial Disorders

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2005
Abstract: Hearing loss is a common clinical feature in mitochondria‐syndrome disorders. The underlining molecular etiology of hearing loss has not been fully investigated. In this study, 83 patients with mitochondrial syndromic hearing loss were evaluated clinically and their blood and tissue samples were examined molecularly.
Pu Dai   +5 more
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Music exposure and hearing disorders: An overview [PDF]

open access: possibleInternational Journal of Audiology, 2009
It has been generally accepted that excessive exposure to loud music causes various hearing symptoms (e.g. tinnitus) and consequently leads to a risk of permanent hearing damage, known as noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL). Such potential risk of NIHL due to loud music exposure has been widely investigated in musicians and people working in music venues.
Fei Zhao   +3 more
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Screening of hearing disorders in schoolchildren

American Journal of Otolaryngology, 1982
A program of screening hearing in schoolchildren based in part on the teacher's observations of behavioral, language, and learning problems has been initiated. Every child identified as suffering from "school pathology" is referred to the school nurse, who arranges for otolaryngologic evaluation, including a complete otologic examination and audiologic
Pierre Ferron, Paul Savary
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NEW TREATMENT FOR HEARING DISORDERS

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1946
IN THIS paper we describe a new treatment for hearing disorders. It consists of a combination of amino acids and vitamins. Quick response and lasting improvement have resulted from the use of this medication. PHARMACOLOGIC COMMENT A year previous to this experiment one of us (Dr.
Augusta Jellinek   +2 more
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Hearing disorders in multiple sclerosis

2015
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a disease that is both a focal inflammatory and a chronic neurodegenerative disease. The focal inflammatory component is characterized by destruction of central nervous system myelin, including the spinal cord; as such it can impair any central neural system, including the auditory system.
Robert A. Levine, Miriam Furst
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The Immune System in Hearing Disorders

Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 1988
Cellular and humoral immune reactions may play a role in the ethiopathogenesis of audiovestibular dysfunction. Immune-mediated inner ear disorders can be of cochlear and retrocochlear origin. Autoimmunity plays a certain role, but is certainly not obligatory. Anti-inflammatory treatment remains the mainstay of therapy.
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Hearing and Speech Disorders in Childhood *

Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 1961
Success in the training and education of deaf children largely depends on finding them young. This can be greatly facilitated by recognising which babies are ‘at risk’ because they or their mothers have been exposed to known causes of deafness. By analysing these causes it is possible to draw up a register of all babies in a community who are ‘at risk’.
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Hearing Losses, Hearing Aids, and Children with Language Disorders

Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1973
Theoretical interpretations and terminological practices can interfere with appropriate clinical management of hearing losses in children with language disorders. De-emphasis of the significance of hearing losses for pure tones in children who present problems in language development is unwarranted.
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