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Management of Children with Unilateral Hearing Loss

Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America, 2015
Children with impaired hearing in one ear (unilateral hearing loss [UHL]) and normal hearing in the other ear experience challenges in understanding speech in noisy backgrounds and localizing the source of sounds in 3-dimensional space. They are at a high risk for speech and language delay and need educational help in school.
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Outcomes of Children with Mild Bilateral Hearing Loss and Unilateral Hearing Loss [PDF]

open access: possibleSeminars in Hearing, 2008
Studies of children with minimal hearing loss have included children with varying degrees of hearing loss, ranging from 16 dB hearing level (HL) to 44 dB HL. Because children with unilateral, high-frequency, and mild bilateral hearing loss have not previously been identified in the newborn period, it has been difficult to describe the developmental ...
Karen Carpenter   +3 more
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Diplacusis in Unilateral High-Frequency Hearing Losses

Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1965
Pitch-matching performances of five subjects with unilateral high-frequency hearing losses and of five subjects with normal hearing were compared on seven conditions at 4000 cps. The method of adjustment was used in two intra-aural, one binaural, and two interaural conditions all at 40 dB and two interaural conditions at 80 dB.
Thomas W. Norris, John H. Gaeth
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An Introduction to Unilateral Sensorineural Hearing Loss in Children

Ear and Hearing, 1986
This paper offers a general review of literature on issues pertinent to unilateral hearing loss in children. The paper focuses on such areas as demographic considerations, the importance of binaural hearing, the effects of noise on speech recognition, learning and educational factors, and auditory deprivation.
Fred H. Bess, Anne Marie Tharpe
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The Occlusion Effect in Unilateral Functional Hearing Loss

Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1970
Bone-conduction tests were administered to subjects who feigned a hearing loss in the right ear. The tests were conducted under two conditions: With and without occlusion of the non-test ear. It was anticipated that the occlusion effect, a well-known audiological principle, would operate to draw low frequency bone-conducted signals to the occluded side
Marie Denman, Gary Thompson
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Etiology of unilateral neural hearing loss in children

International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology, 2009
Unilateral sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) can be caused by a variety of lesions of the inner ear and central nervous system. An inner hair cell or neural site of pathology must be suspected when otoacoustic emissions (OAEs) are present, and inconsistent with audiologic data.
Sarah McKay   +5 more
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Occlusion Effect: Unilateral Sensorineural Hearing Loss

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1968
The discrepancy between the occlusion effect and a corresponding sound pressure, which arises in the external auditory canal, was compare for 10 normal-hearing subjects and 10 subjects with a unilateral sensorineural hearing loss. No significant differences were found between the mean occlusion effects of the two groups.
Frederic A. Tyszka, David P. Goldstein
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Migraine With Transient Unilateral Hearing Loss and Tinnitus

Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 2009
CLINICAL HISTORY A 25-year-old man presented with a 1.5-year history of headaches occurring about once every 1-2 weeks. He described a severe back of the head throbbing which would then move to the top of the head associated with nausea, light, and noise sensitivity but no aura lasting up to 24 hours. He was not aware of any triggers.
Gail Ishiyama, Randolph W. Evans
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A personal perspective on unilateral hearing loss.

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2009
Although I have been unilaterally deaf since birth, only later in life have I realized the extent of this handicap and how I can best manage it. The effects of this hearing loss are complicated, being an interplay of physics, psychology, social interaction, etc. Because people are able to adapt, the extent of this “unseen” handicap is underappreciated.
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UNILATERAL SENSORINEURAL HEARING LOSS-Reply

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1966
Reply: The unilateral sensorineural loss following mumps is the most common and one of the most dramatic examples of viremic labyrinthitis. The mumps virus attacks the labyrinth with fairly high frequency, the exact figures being unknown at the present time.
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