1.Training of nurses in ear examination and hearing screening in the school setting (Phase II): A cross-sectional study.
Gloria-Cruz Teresita Luisa I. ; Chiong Charlotte M. ; Chan Abner L. ; Llanes Erasmo Gonzalo DV ; Reyes-Quintos Ma. Rina T. ; Yang Nathaniel W. ; Abes Generoso T.
Acta Medica Philippina 2010;44(3):39-45
OBJECTIVES:To determine the agreement between 1) ear examination findings of the otorhinolaryngologist using an otoscope and trained elementary school nurses using a penlight, 2) hearing screening findings of the otorhinolaryngologist and elementary school nurses, both using the Philippine National Ear Institute (PNEI) Method of 512 Hz Tuning Fork Test (TFT) and 3) PNEI Method of 512 Hz TFT findings and screening audiometry findings.
METHODS:In this continuing study, nurses residing in the venue of the study, and previously trained in ear examination using a penlight and hearing screening using the PNEI 512 Hz TFT, conducted these in school children who attended the hearing screening and medical mission. Otoscopy, PNEI Method of 512 Hz TFT, and screening audiometry were then conducted on the children by the otolaryngologist. The nurses and the otolaryngologist performed independent and blinded assessments.
RESULTS:Eighteen nurses and ninety children participated in the study. Data subjected to Kappa statistics showed good agreement between nurses and otorhinolaryngologist's findings in the examination of the external canal and tympanic membrane and in PNEI Method of 512 Hz TFTs, and between the PNEI Method of 512 Hz TFT and screening audiometry.
CONCLUSION:PNEI methods of penlight ear examination and 512 Hz TFT may be effective tools for early detection of common ear conditions and hearing screening in Filipino school children. These may be conducted in the school setting not only by otorhinolaryngologists but also by adequately trained school nurses.
Human ; Male ; Female ; Middle Aged ; Adult ; Young Adult ; Adolescent ; Child ; Child Preschool ; Diagnosis ; Nurses ; Hearing ; Audiometry ; Child ; Ear Diseases ; Early Diagnosis ; Humans ; Otolaryngologists ; Otoscopes ; Otoscopy ; Philippines ; Religious Missions ; Schools ; Tympanic Membrane ; Hearing Tests
2.Otoscopic and audiologic findings in an ati community in Boracay
Charlotte M Chiong ; Generoso T Abes ; Meliza Anne M Dalizay-Cruz ; Kathleen R Fellizar ; Rodante A Roldan ; Ma Leah C Tantoco ; Regie Lyn P Santos ; Maria Rina Reyes-Quintos
Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2007;22(1-2):19-221
Background: Certain indigenous populations have been noted by the World Health Organization (WHO) to havethe highest prevalence ratesforchronicsuppurativeotitis media (CSOM), including the Australian Aborigines (28-43%), Greenlanders (2-10%) and Alaskan Eskimos (2-10%). Objectives: To determine the prevalence of common ear problems, particularly CSOM, among the indigenous Ati or Aeta community in Bolabog, Boracay, and to determine their hearing sensitivity using screening audiometry. Methods: Study Design - Descriptive cross-sectional study. Setting - A small Ati community in Bolabog, Boracay. Population - A total of 63 adults and children underwent medical interview and otoscopy. Additionally 24 had their hearing screened by audiometry. Results: About a quarter of the population participated in the study, including 41 children (40 percent of all children) and 22 adults (18 percent of all adults). Forty-six percent of children and 23 percent of adults who were examined had previous history of ear discharge, while 22 percent of children and 45 percent of adults who were examined had history of hearing loss. Seventeen percent of children had history of hearing loss in the family. CSOM was found in 18 (43.90 percent) children and 8 (36.36 percent) adults. Impacted cerumen was found in 17.1 percent of children. Eleven female children underwent screening audiometry. Of these, eight had normal hearing and three had abnormal findings. Thirteen adults were also tested, five of whom were male and had normal hearing bilaterally. Four of eight female adults had abnormal hearing, of which three were unilateral. Conclusions: The Ati population in Bolabog, Boracay belongs to a group with the highest prevalence rates for CSOM (27.0 percent). A bigger sample for screening audiometry is required for proper estimation of hearing loss prevalence. Both environmental and genetic factors may have increased the prevalence of CSOM in the Ati population of Boracay. (Author)
HEARING LOSS OTITIS MEDIA OTITIS MEDIA
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SUPPURATIVE
3.The Philippine National Ear Institute: Patient and audilogic profiles
Generoso T Abes ; Abner L Chan ; Maria Rina Reyes-Quintos ; Rodante A Roldan ; Scheherazade C Ibrahim ; Genilou Liv M Gimena ; Charina Melinda C Elgar ; Ma Luz M San Agustin ; Charlotte M Chiong ; Regie Lyn P Santos-Cortez
Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2007;22(1-2):12-18
Background: The Philippine National Ear Institute (PNEI) was created to promote health of hearing and balance among Filipinos. Over the years, it has provided audiologic services to thousands of patients annually and has published relevant hearing and balance research. Objective: To describe the patients served by the PNEI in terms of age, region of origin, occupation, pretest diagnosis, and audiologic results. Methods: Study Design - Cross-sectional study Setting - National tertiary care center Population - All records of patients referred for audiologic testing at PNEI in 2006 were reviewed and encoded into analyzable format. Results: A total of 1,756 patients had audiologic records for review. Median age was 32.5 years, with the age distribution presented according to sex, type of tests done including common reasons for referral, and median threshold levels by frequency. Coverage was national in scope, with most patients coming from the National Capital Region and from Regions III and IVa. Occupation was indicated in 37.8 percent of the working age group, most of whom were unemployed. The most common pretest diagnosis was chronic otitis media (26.6 percent), followed by hearing loss of unknown etiology (13.0 percent) and tinnitus (9.3 percent). Severity of hearing impairment based on pure tone audiometry was variable, and was presented according to common diagnoses. About 39 percent of hearing impairment cases were sensorineural, 36 percent conductive and 25 percent due to mixed defect. Bilateral Type A ears were found in 45.4 percent of patients by tympanometry, while 29.3 percent were bilateral Type B. For otoacoustic emissions, 69.0 percent were labeled as "refer" in at least one ear. Conclusion: The PNEI is a major national referral center for audiology that holds much promise in developing programs for national surveillance of the hearing status of different sectors in Philippine society. (Author)
HEARING AUDIOLOGY ACOUSTIC IMPEDANCE TESTS OTITIS MEDIA
4.Accuracy of Siemens hearcheck™ navigator as a screening tool for hearing loss
Kathleen R. Fellizar-Lopez ; Generoso T. Abes ; Ma. Rina T. Reyes-Quintos ; Ma. Leah S. Tantoco
Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2011;26(1):10-15
Objective:
To calculate the accuracy, sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive values of the Siemens HearCheck™ Navigator in detecting hearing loss and to compare values of these parameters when the examination is done in a soundproof booth and in a quiet room.
Methods:
Design: Analytical, cross-sectional study
Setting: Tertiary Public University Hospital
Patients: Patients seen at the Ear Unit of a tertiary public university hospital from June 2009 to August 2010 were tested using the Siemens HearCheck™ Navigator and pure tone audiometry, inside a soundproof audiometry booth and in a quiet room with an ambient noise of 50dB, with a different investigator for each examination. Each ear was treated as a separate subject. Results obtained from the HearCheck™ Navigator were designated as observed values and were classified as “no hearing loss” for green light, and “with hearing loss” for yellow or red lights. Results were compared with pure tone air conduction averages designated as gold standard values. Normal hearing acuity (0-25 dB) was classified as no hearing loss. Pure tone air conduction averages of 26dB and above were classified as “with hearing loss” and were further stratified as mild hearing loss (26-40dB) and moderate or worse hearing loss (>41 dB). Observed and gold standard values were compared and tabulated in a 2x2 table for all levels of hearing loss, mild hearing loss, and moderate or worse hearing loss. Accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of the Siemens HearCheck™ Navigator inside a soundproof audiometry booth and in a quiet room were determined using pure tone audiometry as the gold standard.
Results:
100 patients (200 ears) were tested, with a median age of 43 years old (range 15-75), and an almost equal number of male and female participants (52 males, 48 females). Accuracy rate of the Siemens HearCheck™ Navigator inside the soundproof audiometry booth and in a quiet room were 82.5% and 84% respectively for all levels of hearing loss. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values were similar whether the examination was done inside the soundproof audiometry booth or in a quiet room. These values were notably higher in patients with moderate or worse hearing loss compared to patients with mild hearing loss.
Conclusion
The Siemens HearCheck™ Navigator shows potential as an accurate, portable, easy-to-use tool to screen for hearing loss, especially for cases of moderate or worse hearing loss, without the need for soundproof audiometry booths or special training. It is recommended that further studies be done to differentiate degrees of hearing loss, and to evaluate its usefulness in other target populations, including school children and the elderly.
Hearing Loss
5.Lack of methylation changes in GJB2 and RB1 non-coding regions of cochlear implant patients with sensorineural hearing loss
Angelo Augusto M. Sumalde ; Ivana V. Yang ; Talitha Karisse L. Yarza ; Celina Ann M. Tobias-Grasso ; Ma. Leah C. Tantoco ; Elizabeth Davidson ; Abner L. Chan ; Mahshid S. Azamian ; Teresa Luisa G. Cruz ; Seema R. Lalani ; Maria Rina T. Reyes-Quintos ; Eva Maria Cutiongco-de la Paz ; Regie Lyn P. Santos-Cortez ; Charlotte M. Chiong
Acta Medica Philippina 2023;57(9):116-120
Objective:
Recent advances in epigenetic studies continue to reveal novel mechanisms of gene regulation and control, however little is known on the role of epigenetics in sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in humans. We aimed to investigate the methylation patterns of two regions, one in RB1 and another in GJB2 in Filipino patients with SNHL compared to hearing control individuals.
Methods:
We investigated an RB1 promoter region that was previously identified as differentially methylated in children with SNHL and lead exposure. Additionally, we investigated a sequence in an enhancer-like region within GJB2 that contains four CpGs in close proximity. Bisulfite conversion was performed on salivary DNA samples from 15 children with SNHL and 45 unrelated ethnically-matched individuals. We then performed methylation-specific real-time PCR analysis (qMSP) using TaqMan® probes to determine percentage methylation of the two regions.
Results:
Using qMSP, both our cases and controls had zero methylation at the targeted GJB2 and RB1 regions.
Conclusion
Our study showed no changes in methylation at the selected CpG regions in RB1 and GJB2 in the two comparison groups with or without SNHL. This may be due to a lack of environmental exposures to these target regions. Other epigenetic marks may be present around these regions as well as those of other HL-associated genes.
Hearing Loss
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Methylation