2018
DOI: 10.5935/0946-5448.20180002
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Hyperacusis in Children: A Preliminary Study on the Effects of Hypersensitivity to Sound on Speech and Language

Abstract: There is a growing awareness that children may experience hyperacusis, a condition that is often associated with behavioral and developmental disorders. This preliminary study was aimed to investigate the effects of hyperacusis alone on various components of speech and language in children without developmental disorders. This study was conducted on 109 children aged between 4 and 7 years attending kindergarten and primary school. Hyperacusis was assessed through behavioral observation of children and question… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…There were also cases of a 21-month-old female [29], a 6-year-old male [2, case 1], a 7-year-old female [41], a 12-year-old male [45], and a 15-year-old male [40]. The remaining records included both males and females, and reported age ranges of 4-7 years [46] [28] specified age at hyperacusis onset and that it was gradual in all 412 cases of the sample. Of the ten case studies included in this review, six were male [2,30,35,36,40,45] and four were female children [29,37,41,38].…”
Section: Age and Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…There were also cases of a 21-month-old female [29], a 6-year-old male [2, case 1], a 7-year-old female [41], a 12-year-old male [45], and a 15-year-old male [40]. The remaining records included both males and females, and reported age ranges of 4-7 years [46] [28] specified age at hyperacusis onset and that it was gradual in all 412 cases of the sample. Of the ten case studies included in this review, six were male [2,30,35,36,40,45] and four were female children [29,37,41,38].…”
Section: Age and Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two records [2,37] described fear as a reaction. Others included symptoms such as sweaty palms, shaking, palpitations [43], headache, change in mood or facial expression [35], urinary incontinence, grinding one's teeth, freezing, distress [33], running away [31,37,40], hiding [31], cringing, arching of the back [38], 'going into meltdown' [2], hyperactivity in noisy environments [46], or the child throwing themselves to the floor [40].…”
Section: Reactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The pediatri-tion of the disease, knowing that even without a diagnostic label, the single problems can be faced in the same way. (18,20,(22)(23)(24)(25)(26). At this point the pediatrician should inform the parents about the limits of the diagnostic process, in fact his suspicion could be erroneous or else it isn't possible to draw up a perfect diagnosis (13).…”
Section: The Pediatrician Meets the Child With A Malformative Syndromementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Table 2. The clinical and genetic characteristics of the most common genetic syndromes (7,8,13,23,25,29,(31)(32)(33)(34)(35)(36)(37)(38)(39)(40)(41)(42)(43)(44)(45)(46). Tarani et al…”
Section: When and How Can The Syndrome Be Suspectedmentioning
confidence: 99%