A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Types of Hearing Tests

Audiometer Tests
Audiometer Tests

This is why your doctor will want to test your hearing every few years, rather than just once as an adult. Experts recommend that adults get their hearing tested every 10 years until age 50, and then every 3 years after that.

source: webmd.com
Auditometry
Auditometry

This test may be done in a quiet or noisy room, since some people have trouble hearing voices when there’s background noise. What the Results Mean. A hearing test isn’t a pass-fail exam. But the results can show whether you have hearing loss in one or both ears and how much hearing is gone.

source: webmd.com
image: dxline.info
Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR)
Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR)

The auditory brainstem response (ABR) is an auditory evoked potential extracted from ongoing electrical activity in the brain and recorded via electrodes placed on the scalp. The measured recording is a series of six to seven vertex positive waves of which I through V are evaluated.

General Screening Tests
General Screening Tests

During some hearing tests, you may also be asked to listen to speech at different volumes, which will be played into one ear at a time. The voices will be played quietly through your earphones, and you’ll be asked to repeat what words were just said.

source: webmd.com
Impedance Testing
Impedance Testing

Impedance Testing Tympanometry allows the audiologist to measure how well the eardrum is vibrating when sound strikes and how well the tiny bones of the ear are functioning to transmit those vibrations to the organ of hearing. It also measures the pressure in the space behind the eardrum that contains those bones. For tympanometry, a soft ...

Otoacoustic Emissions Testing(OAE) Quick, non
Otoacoustic Emissions Testing(OAE) Quick, non

Otoacoustic Emissions Hearing tests are usually performed on newborn babies to detect deafness. The test can also partially estimate hearing sensitivity and test for functional hearing loss. The test can also partially estimate hearing sensitivity and test for functional hearing loss.

image: d.umn.edu
Physical Exam
Physical Exam

A hearing test isn’t a pass-fail exam. But the results can show whether you have hearing loss in one or both ears and how much hearing is gone. The intensity of sound is measured in units called decibels.

source: webmd.com
Tuning Fork Tests
Tuning Fork Tests

Rinne and Weber tests are exams that test for hearing loss. They help determine whether you may have conductive or sensorineural hearing loss. This determination allows a doctor to come up with a treatment plan for your hearing changes. A Rinne test evaluates hearing loss by comparing air conduction to bone conduction.

Related Facts