Central auditory processing in children with dysphonia: behavioral and electrophysiological assessment
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.23925/2176-2724.2020v32i2p308-318Keywords:
Child, Hearing, Dysphonia, Auditory tests.Abstract
Introduction: Central auditory processing disorder may occur in parallel with other dysfunctions, such as dysphonia. Objective: To investigate auditory processing results in children with dysphonia. Methods: Comparative and cross-sectional study of 16 children aged 8 to 11 years old, who were divided into two groups: a study group of 7 children with functional or organic and functional dysphonia; and a control group of 9 children with no vocal complaints or disorders. After clinical assessment voices were recorded and children underwent perceptive voice evaluation, audiogram, and auditory processing with behavioral and electrophysiological tests. Results: A statistically significant difference was found between the groups with regard to dichotic nonverbal listening tests, humming in the frequency pattern test, and gap detection threshold, in addition to the percentage of correct answers in gap-in-noise test and for the P300 latency. Conclusion: Children with dysphonia had central auditory processing disorder with changes in listening skills for figure-ground to nonverbal sounds, ordering and temporal resolution and P300 latency suggesting a concomitant impairment in cognitive processing of acoustic information.Downloads
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Copyright (c) 2020 Aline Buratti Sanches, Angélica Tiegs, Rebecca Maunsell, Ana Carolina Constantini, Maria Francisca Colella-Santos
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.