Alzheimer's, Dementia & Mental Health
Senior Citizens with Problem Processing Sounds More
Likely to Have Dementia
Central auditory processing tests were significantly
lower in the group with dementia
July 22, 2008 - Mild memory impairment may be
associated with central auditory processing dysfunction, or difficulty
hearing in complex situations with competing noise, such as hearing a
single conversation amid several other conversations, according to a
report in the July issue of Archives of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck
Surgery, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Central auditory processing dysfunction is a
general term that is applied to persons whose hearing in quiet settings
is normal or near normal yet who have substantial hearing difficulty in
the presence of auditory stressors such as competing noise and other
difficult listening situations, the authors write as background
information in the article.
Central auditory testing is important in
evaluating individuals with hearing difficulty, because poor central
auditory ability, per se, is not helped by amplification and requires
alternative rehabilitation strategies.
Previous studies have shown that central auditory
processing is impaired in individuals with Alzheimers disease and other
types of dementia.
George A. Gates, M.D., of the University of
Washington, Seattle, and colleagues assessed 313 individuals (average
age 80 years) participating in a dementia surveillance program that
began in 1994. These included 17 individuals who had been diagnosed with
dementia, 64 with mild memory impairment but without a dementia
diagnosis and 232 controls without memory loss.
Participants completed three tests designed to
gauge central auditory processing: one in which nonsense sentences are
read over the background of an interesting narrative and two in which
separate sentences or numbers are read into each ear simultaneously.
These central auditory processing test paradigms
evaluate how well an individual manages competing signals, a task that
requires adequate short-term memory and the ability to shift attention
rapidly, the authors state.
Average scores on central auditory processing tests
were significantly lower in the group with dementia and in the group
with mild memory impairment than in the control group without memory
problems. The association remained significant following adjustment for
age and hearing status.
Central auditory function was affected by even
mild memory impairment, the authors write. We recommend that central
auditory testing be considered in the evaluation of older persons with
hearing complaints as part of a comprehensive, individualized program to
assist their needs in both the aural rehabilitative and the cognitive
domains.
Editor's Note: This research project was supported
by a grant form the National Institute of Deafness and Other
Communication Disorders and by a grant from the National Institute on
Aging.