Top Banner
Hosted by Mrs. Manning
22

Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

Jan 17, 2016

Download

Documents

Barbra Baker
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

Hosted

by

Mrs. Manning

Page 2: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

100 100

200 200

400 400

300

400

Audiology HEARING LOSS

AUDIO-GRAMS

SOUND

300 300 300

200

400

200

100

500 500 500 500

100

Page 3: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

Row 1, Col 1

The right ear is recorded on an audiogram using this symbol

A red circle

Page 4: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

1,2

Swimmer’s Ear occurs in thispart of the ear

The ear canal in the outer ear

Page 5: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

1,3

The normal range of hearing for a child

-10 dB to 15 dB

Page 6: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

1,4

This type of sound energy is found

in the middle ear

Mechanical

Page 7: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

2,1

The left ear is recorded on an audiogram using this symbol

A blue X

Page 8: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

2,2

A perforated tympanic membrane can create this type of hearing loss.

Conductive

Page 9: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

2,3

Permanent hearing loss can occur when exposed to sounds

over this level.

85 dB

Page 10: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

2,4

This type of sound energy is found in the auditory nerve

Electrical

Page 11: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

3,1

A hearing screen should beginat this many decibels

20 dB

Page 12: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

3,2

This type of hearing loss occurs after exposure to loud noises.

Sensorineural

Page 13: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

3,3

Cycles Per Second/Frequency/Hertz

is a measurement for this

Pitch

Page 14: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

3,4

The movement of fluid creates this kind of energy

Hydraulic

Page 15: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

4,1

A person is considered medicallyDeaf at this many decibels.

65 dB

Page 16: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

4,2

This type of hearing loss can be medically corrected

Conductive

Page 17: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

4,3

40 dB to 60 dB is the average range for this

Conversational Speech

Page 18: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

4,4

Sound is interpreted in this structure

The Brain

Page 19: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

5,1

When doing an audio, the examinershould move down and up in

these increments.

Down 10, Up 5

Page 20: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

5,2

A mixed hearing loss occurs here

In the outer OR middle ear AND in the inner ear

Page 21: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

5,3

/K/, /S/, /F/, and /TH/ are examples of this type of sound

High Frequency

Page 22: Hosted by Mrs. Manning 100 200 400 300 400 AudiologyHEARING LOSS AUDIO- GRAMS SOUND 300 200 400 200 100 500 100.

5,4

This is an example of a high frequency sound at

4000 HZ

An airplane