Hyperacusis and Disorders of Sound Intolerance: Clinical and Research Perspectives is a professional resource for audiology practitioners involved in the clinical management of patients who suffer from sound tolerance concerns. The text covers emerging assessment and intervention strategies associated with hyperacusis, disorders of pitch perception, and other unusual processing deficits of the auditory system. In order to illustrate the patients perspectives and experiences with disorders of auditory processing, cases are included throughout.
This collection of diagnostic strategies and tools, evidence-based clinical research, and case reports provides practitioners with avenues for supporting patient management and coping. It combines new developments in the understanding of auditory mechanisms with the clinical tools developed to manage the effects such disorders exert in daily life. Topics addressed include unusual clinical findings and features that influence a patient s auditory processing such as their perceptual accuracy, recognition abilities, and satisfaction with the perception of sound. Hyperacusis is covered with respect to its effects, its relation to psychological disorders, and its management. Hyperacusis is often linked to trauma or closed head injury and the text also considers the management of patients with traumatic brain injury as an opportunity to illustrate the effectiveness of interprofessional care in such cases.
Interventions such as cognitive behavioral therapy, self-efficacy training, and hearing aid use are reported in a way that enhances clinicians' ability to weave such strategies into their own work, or into their referral system. Hyperacusis and Disorders of Sound Intolerance illuminates increasingly observed auditory-related disorders that challenge students, clinicians, physicians, and patients. The text elucidates and reinforces audiologists contributions to polytrauma and interprofessional care teams and provides clear definitions, delineation of mechanisms, and intervention options for auditory disorders.
Author(s): Marc Fagelson, David M. Baguley
Series: Clinical and Research Perspectives
Publisher: Plural Publishing
Year: 2018
Language: English
Pages: 350
City: San Diego
Contents
Preface
Contributors
Section I. Definitions, Measurement, and Epidemiology
1. Disorders of Sound Tolerance: History and Terminology
2. Audiological Assessment of Decreased Sound Tolerance
3. The Epidemiology and Natural History of Disorders of Loudness Perception
4. Scales and Questionnaires for Decreased Sound Tolerance
Section II. Mechanisms
5. Peripheral Mechanisms of Decreased Sound Tolerance
6. Tinnitus and Hyperacusis: Relationship, Mechanisms, and Initiating Conditions
7. Hyperacusis: Medical Diagnoses and Associated Syndromes
8. Animal Models of Hyperacusis and Decreased Sound Tolerance
9. Traumatic Brain Injury and Auditory Processing
10. Psychological Aspects and Management of Hyperacusis
Section III. Auditory Disorders: Manifestations
11. Reflections on the Association between Hyperacusis and Tinnitus
12. Diplacusis
Section IV. Management
13. Increased Sound Sensitivity in Children
14. Hearing Aids for DecreasedSound Tolerance and Minimal Hearing Loss: Gain Without Pain
15. Hyperacusis Management: A Patient’s Perspective
16. Hyperacusis: Past, Present, and Future
Index