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Hearing Impairment in Children: Pupillometry and Hearing Thresholds Assessment
Sponsor: IRCCS Burlo Garofolo
Summary
The results of the previous study on auditory effort in young children with cochlear implants show that pupils respond to the presence or the absence of the perceived stimuli. The investigators hypothesize that the perceived sounds will elicit increased pupil dilation compared to the non-perceived sounds and that the hearing threshold as measured with pure tone audiometry will correlate to the results in pupillometry test. The investigators hypothesize that the effect will be visible in all testing groups albeit the relative increase of pupil size with age. Hypothesis confirmed, the investigators will develop a standardised procedure for the auditory signal detection using pupillometry. Such a procedure could represent an important bridge between automatic and behavioral hearing tests. With a more precise test of auditory threshold of young children, post-operative monitoring and fitting of cochlear implants or hearing aids, and rehabilitation procedures, could be considerably more targeted and consequentially more efficient.
Official title: Using Pupillometry to Assess Hearing Thresholds in Young Children With Hearing Impairment
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
4 Months - 36 Months
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
180
Start Date
2021-01-03
Completion Date
2024-12-31
Last Updated
2024-06-13
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Stimuli
Auditory Stimuli: Pure tone bursts with main frequencies of 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz. Each tone will be presented at 10dB above the estimated individual threshold per frequency and compared to the responses to trials without auditory stimuli. Auditory stimulus duration: 25ms, there is 200ms baseline period before each trial, and 2000 ms interstimulus interval. Visual stimuli: an animated movie adapted for the age and controlled for luminosity levels. Pupil data will be collected through a "Tobii PRO" screen-based eye-tracker that measures eye-movements and pupil dilation using the infrared light cameras.
Locations (5)
UOC Otorinolaringoiatria
Padova, Italy
Università degli Studi di Perugia
Perugia, Italy
Ospedale Martini
Torino, Italy
Institute for Maternal and Child Health - IRCCS "Burlo Garofolo"
Trieste, Italy
Univeristy Medical Center
Ljubljana, Slovenia