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A Systematic Review: State of the Science on Diagnostics of Hidden Hearing Loss

Medicine and Health

A Systematic Review: State of the Science on Diagnostics of Hidden Hearing Loss

S. Shenoy, K. Bhatt, et al.

Many patients with normal audiograms still struggle to follow conversations in noise—so-called hidden hearing loss (HHL). This review was conducted by Sunil Shenoy, Khushi Bhatt, Yalda Yazdani, Helia Rahimian, Hamid R. Djalilian, and Mehdi Abouzari and surveys emerging diagnostic approaches targeting cochlear synaptopathy (loss of auditory synapses). It highlights electrophysiological tools (ABR, EcochG, MEMR, FFR) alongside speech-in-noise testing and suggests combining behavioral and electrophysiological measures may best detect and estimate pathology.... show more
Abstract
Background/Objectives: A sizeable population of patients with normal pure-tone audiograms endorse a consistent difficulty of following conversations in noisy environments. Termed hidden hearing loss (HHL), this condition evades traditional diagnostic methods for hearing loss and thus is significantly under-diagnosed and untreated. This review sought to identify emerging methods of diagnosing HHL via measurement of its histopathologic correlate: cochlear synaptopathy, the loss of synapses in the auditory nerve pathway. Methods: A thorough literature search of multiple databases was conducted to identify studies with objective, electrophysiological measures of synaptopathy. The PRISMA protocol was employed to establish criteria for the selection of relevant literature. Results: A total of 21 studies were selected with diagnostic methods, including the auditory brainstem response (ABR), electrocochleography (EcochG), middle ear muscle reflex (MEMR), and frequency-following response (FFR). Measures that may indicate the presence of synaptopathy include a reduced wave I amplitude of ABR, reduced SP amplitude of EcochG, and abnormal MEMR, among other measurements. Behavioral measures were often performed alongside electrophysiological measures, the most common of which was the speech-in-noise assessment. Conclusions: ABR was the most common diagnostic method for assessing HHL. Though ABR, EcochG, and MEMR may be sensitive to measuring synaptopathy, more literature comparing these methods is necessary. A two-pronged approach combining behavioral and electrophysiological measures may prove useful as a criterion for diagnosing and estimating the extent of pathology in affected patients.
Publisher
Diagnostics
Published On
Mar 16, 2025
Authors
Sunil Shenoy, Khushi Bhatt, Yalda Yazdani, Helia Rahimian, Hamid R. Djalilian, Mehdi Abouzari
Tags
hidden hearing loss
cochlear synaptopathy
auditory brainstem response (ABR)
electrocochleography (EcochG)
middle ear muscle reflex (MEMR)
speech-in-noise assessment
electrophysiological measures
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