Impact of the sensory environment on balance in children with bilateral cochleovestibular loss

•Children with SNHL-BVL have significantly worse balance than their typically developing peers.•Balance skills in children (average age 13.8 years) with bilateral cochleovestibular loss are equivalent to those of a 4.4-year-old child.•Balance improved slightly in children with SNHL-BVL and bilateral...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hearing research 2021-02, Vol.400, p.108134-108134, Article 108134
Hauptverfasser: Wolter, Nikolaus E., Gordon, Karen A., Campos, Jennifer, Vilchez Madrigal, Luis D., Papsin, Blake C., Cushing, Sharon L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Children with SNHL-BVL have significantly worse balance than their typically developing peers.•Balance skills in children (average age 13.8 years) with bilateral cochleovestibular loss are equivalent to those of a 4.4-year-old child.•Balance improved slightly in children with SNHL-BVL and bilateral implants when they were given access to sound through their implants.•The ability to balance was not altered when children were attempting to balance in a complex moving virtual environment.•Moving auditory sound cues did not significantly alter balance in children with SNHL-BVL but led to poorer balance in typically developing children. The aim of the present study was to determine the role of auditory and visual sensory input on balance in children with bilateral cochlevestibular loss. The prevalence of vestibular impairment, and specifically bilateral vestibular loss (BVL) in children with sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is high and children with profound cochleovestibular loss (SNHL-BVL) have impaired balance (Suarez et al., 2007; Suarez et al., 2019). Given that both hearing and vestibular impairments are often congenital or acquired in early life, it remains difficult to tease out the individual developmental impact of either one on balance and spatial awareness in children who experience both of these sensory deficits. While cochlear implants (CI) can provide or restore access to sound in children with SNHL-BVL, there is currently no vestibular prosthetic available for clinical use in this population. These children may also use their intact sensory inputs (i.e. vision) to a greater extent to support balance. Alternately, restoring or providing access to sound may, on its own, help these children to balance better. We hypothesized that balance in children with SNHL-BVL who use bilateral CIs is: 1) improved in the presence of directional sound and 2) impaired when visual cues are dynamic (moving) rather than static. Balance was assessed in 18 children with SNHL-BVL and 34 typically developing children with intact vestibular function and normal hearing by performing the Bruininks-Oseretsky Test of Motor Proficiency–2 (BOT-2) balance subtest in a virtual-reality simulator under 4 sensory conditions of graded complexity. Randomized conditions combined 2 auditory (moving directional street sounds vs. directionless static white noise) and 2 visual (dynamic street scene vs. stationary street scene) stimuli designed to recreate a “real-world” busy downtown str
ISSN:0378-5955
1878-5891
DOI:10.1016/j.heares.2020.108134