1 / 26

Hearing and Vision

Hearing and Vision. Development of Young Children with Disabilities #872.514 (61) Carol Ann Heath. HEARING . Through hearing we perceive and understand our surroundings, we communicate, and we learn. Sound. Pattern of vibrations Waves have both a frequency or pitch and an intensity

Télécharger la présentation

Hearing and Vision

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hearing and Vision Development of Young Children with Disabilities#872.514 (61)Carol Ann Heath

  2. HEARING Through hearing we perceive and understand our surroundings, we communicate, and we learn.

  3. Sound • Pattern of vibrations • Waves have both a frequency or pitch and an intensity • Closer the waves, higher the frequency • Number of cycles per second (top to top)

  4. Hearing Loss • Types of Hearing Loss • conductive • sensorineural • mixed

  5. Categories of Severity • Normal –can distinguish sound intensities of 20 dB or less • Mild –cannot hear a sound between 25-45 dB • Moderate –cannot hear a sound between 45-70 dB • Severe –cannot hear a sound between 70-90 dB • Profound –greater than 90 dB

  6. Type • Unilateral loss • One ear • Less severe • Less than 20% of hearing impaired children • Bilateral loss – both ears

  7. Causes • > 50% unknown • Mild-moderate conductive (most common) • Result from chronic otitis media • Middle ear infection • 12% of all children have a middle ear infection • Cleft palate results in ear infections • Transient loss due to noise pollution

  8. Severe sensorineural loss • 50% due to genetically inherited condition • 70 types of hereditary deafness • Autosomal recessive disorders • Teacher Collins syndrome • Waardenburg syndrome • Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome • Usher syndrome

  9. Some severe losses are acquired • Intrauterine infection (rubella, toxoplasmosis, herpes, cytomegalovirus) • Anoxia during delivery • Infant infections & antibiotics used • Head trauma

  10. Incidence • Occurs in approximately 0.5% of the population • 40% have a mild loss • 20% have a severe loss • 20% have a profound loss • 1/1000 children • 65% born deaf • 12% develop deafness during first 3 years of life

  11. Hearing Milestones • Hearing mechanism is functional by 20 weeks gestation • Newborn will: • Suck preferentially to voice of mother • Will awaken to loud voice of parent • Prefers to listen to speech

  12. By 2 months infant can distinguish vowel from consonant sounds • By 4 months infant shows speech pattern preference • By 5 months speech is not influenced by what infant hears (babbling sounds alike worldwide)

  13. Identification • Often delay in diagnosis • Reported age of congenital hearing loss of severe to profound in under 6 mos to 18 months • Early development is nonverbal and used prelinguistic communication • Universal infant hearing screen

  14. Formal Testing • Performed to: • Determine whether there is a hearing loss • Differentiate a conductive from a sensorineural loss • Determine the configuration of the loss in each ear • Estimate the clarity with which speech sounds can be discriminated

  15. Vision • Vision is important to understanding of the world • Blindness causes delays in walking, talking, and dependence on others

  16. The Eye • Reflected rays of light from an object strike the eye and are refracted at the surfaces of the cornea and the lens • Refractions yields an image on the retina • Transmitted to the occipital lobes of the brain and is interpreted

  17. Development of the Eye • In the fetus, the eyes first appear at 3 weeks of gestation as two bulbs at the side of the head • Hollow out to form the optic cups, then the iris, the lens, and the cornea • By 7 wks, the embryo is only one inch but the eyes are in their basic form • The eyes move from the side of the head to the center of the face

  18. Diseases of the Eye • The cornea • The lens • The retina • The optic nerve • The eye muscles

  19. Development of Visual Skills • Newborn can distinguish colors, focus on an object, and follow the movement of a face 90% across the visual field • By 1 month, a child can follow an object horizontally • By 2 months can follow the object vertically and imitate a smile • At 3 months, follow an object in a complete circle • At 4 months can reach and grab an object • By 6 months, 20/20 visual acuity

  20. Testing Vision • Young infants –measure an optiocokinetic response; done by twirling a cylinder with blk & wh strips; if eye does not move serious vision problem • 6 to 12 mos –rolling balls down an incline to see if child follows movement; use different sized pictures of toys • Older children –Snellen eye chart

  21. Blindness • Legal blindness • Defined as visual acuity of less than 20/200 despite correction • Partially sighted • 20/70 to 20/200 with correction

  22. Incidence • Overall incidence is .4/1000 • 46% born blind • 38% loss sight < 1 yr

  23. Levels • 25% totally blind • 25% have some light perception • 50% use large type

  24. Causes • Most common causes are prenatal viral infections and eye malformations • At birth, retrolental fibroplasia (RLF), trauma, infections, and tumors

  25. Development • May be an isolated disability or part of a multiple disability • Notice abnormalities in eye movement; eyes may be jerky, uncoordinated, not focus or follow objects • Even with normal intelligence, may have early developmental delays

  26. Interventions • Large print books • Braille • Early intervention • Mobility training • Environmental modifications

More Related