... of hearingloss in patients with more than 5 years of evolution of T1DM, without it being asso- ciated or ...of hearing studies which allow us to detect hearing problems in a timely ...
... frequencies sensorineuralhearingloss (SNHL, Table 1), tinnitus, and aural fullness ...the loss of vestibu- lar function, and bilateral SNHL has a significant influence in the health-related ...
... sudden sensorineuralhearingloss (SSNHL) was described for the first time by McCabe (1979), many have tried to define, explain and handle this upheaval ...
... sudden sensorineuralhearingloss without previous ...a hearing recovery of 30dB at the fourth week, PUPU[OLL_WLYPTLU[HSNYV\W[YLH[LK^P[OJVTIPULK[OLYHW`HUK ...
... diagnosed sensorineuralhearingloss in children has no known ...of hearingloss; it is associated to progressive loss during childhood and it is one of the most frequent ...
... with sensorineuralhearingloss and normal hearing ...the hearing-impaired listeners. Four normal- hearing listeners and 4 listeners with moderately-severe, bilateral symmetrical ...
... Introduction: Sensorineuralhearingloss is characterized by changes on inner ear and cochlear ...to hearingloss we have Dyslipidemia, Hypertension and Diabetes Mellitus, all of which ...
... with sensorineuralhearingloss, aural fullness or pressure, and tinnitus (MIM ...The hearingloss usually affects the low frequencies first, and in an animal model of endolymphatic ...
... Abstract: Hearing aids or cochlear implants constitute almost exclusively the treatment options currently available to patients suffering from sensorineuralhearingloss and related ...
... sudden sensorineuralhearingloss (ISSNHL) usu- ally presents as an acute unilateral deafness, with an abrupt onset, generally within 3 days, of more than 30-dB hearingloss at three ...
... The failure of proper activation of functionally intact MET may be explained through structural abnormalities of stereocilia in Gnai3 KO mice, such as shorter hair bundles. Indeed, we have several implications that MET ...
... Some amount of the acoustical energy delivered to the ear canal escapes through openings in the earmold or ITE shell and enters the microphone of the hearing aid again. Especially with high power hearing ...
... • Hearing Protection: usually when musicians use hearing protection devices or earplugs, they complain about the nature of sound they are ...the loss of brilliance in the sound is that normal ...
... Our finding concerning the characteristics of the methodology employed by the teacher shows that the strategies used by James to assess the effectiveness of the lesson are similar to those presented by Scrivener (200…..) ...
... real qualities of sound, they also emit intentional species. Suárez conceives these species as material and divisible entities, the main function of which is to (virtually) represent the real qualities. Suárez is quick ...
... However, before this can be achieved, it is first necessary to gather further information on the capacity of the correlational method to provide reliable information on the perceptual strategies of both normal ...
... of hearing people, essential parts of some phonemes are not perceptible and they recognize sounds by noting which frequencies contain the most ...consequently, hearing-impaired people tend to miss ...
... As Fernández (2002) says, Hearing Impairments have critical repercussions in the speaking area and the acquisition of a language. This is due to the fact that acquisition of language follows a concrete path. For ...