Audiometric Profiles in Autism Spectrum Disorders: Does Subclinical Hearing Loss Impact Communication?

Carly Demopoulos, Jeffrey David Lewine, Carly Demopoulos, Jeffrey David Lewine

Abstract

Rates of hearing impairment in individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) are higher than those reported in the general population. Although ASD is not caused by hearing impairment, it may exacerbate symptomatology. Participants with ASD (N = 60) and typically developing peers (N = 16) aged 5-18 years underwent a comprehensive audiological screening (pure tone audiometry, uncomfortable loudness level, tympanometry, acoustic reflexes, distortion product otoacoustic emissions, and auditory brainstem response) and assessment of communication abilities (expressive/receptive language, articulation, phonological awareness, and vocal affect recognition). Incidence of abnormal findings on at least one measure of audiological functioning was higher for the ASD group (55%) than controls (14.9%) or the general population estimate (6%). The presence of sound sensitivity was also considerably higher for the ASD group (37%) compared with controls (0%) or general population estimates (8-15%). When participants with ASD were dichotomized into groups with and without evidence of clinical audiological abnormality, no significant differences were identified on measures of communication; however, results of correlational analyses indicated that variability in hearing thresholds at middle range frequencies (2000 Hz) was significantly related to performance on all measures of speech articulation and language after correction for multiple comparisons (r = -0.48 to r = -0.53, P < 0.0045). These findings suggest that dichotomized classification of clinical audiology may not be sufficient to understand the role of subclinical hearing loss in ASD symptomatology and that treatment studies for mild/subclinical hearing loss in this population may be worthwhile.

Keywords: audiology; auditory brainstem response; autism; communication; hearing.

© 2015 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Rates and χ2 values for normal versus abnormal findings on audiological screening measures in participants diagnosed with ASD and controls. The rightmost chart marked “Any Measure” indicates the rates of normal versus abnormal findings on at least one of the audiological screening measures.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Scatterplot of hearing threshold values for 2000Hz PTA and scores on CELF Core Language Index

Source: PubMed

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