Search for dissertations about: "sensorineural hearing loss"
Showing result 6 - 10 of 33 swedish dissertations containing the words sensorineural hearing loss.
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6. Tinnitus in Patients with Sensorineural Hearing Loss : Management, Quality of Life and Treatment Strategies
Abstract : Approximately 15% of Swedish people experience tinnitus, but only 2.4% experience severe problems. Treatment modalities for tinnitus vary, but the most common treatment is counseling. READ MORE
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7. Tinnitus in Patients with Sensorineural Hearing Loss : Management and Quality of Life
Abstract : Approximately 15 % of Swedish people experience tinnitus, but only 2.4 % of them experience severe problems. Treatment modalities for tinnitus are varied, but the most common treatment model is counselling. READ MORE
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8. Otosclerosis; clinical long term-perspectives
Abstract : This thesis has assessed medical, technical and health-related aspects of otosclerosis from a long-term perspective. A retrospective clinical study was performed where 65 subjects who had previously undergone stapedectomy (1977-1979) were assessed. Twenty-eight - Thirty years later a follow-up was conducted. READ MORE
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9. Effects of Specific Cochlear Pathologies on the Auditory Functions : Modelling, Simulations and Clinical Implications
Abstract : A hearing impairment is primarily diagnosed by measuring the hearing thresholds at a range of auditory frequencies (air-conduction audiometry). Although this clinical procedure is simple, affordable, reliable and fast, it does not offer differential information about origins of the hearing impairment. READ MORE
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10. Children with congenital unilateral sensorineural hearing loss : etiology, newborn diagnostics, and hearing aid amplification
Abstract : Congenital unilateral sensorineural hearing loss (uSNHL) comprises about 25% of the sensorineural hearing losses (SNHLs) found through newborn hearing screening (NHS) programs. Even if children with congenital uSNHL struggle in school and everyday listening situations, studies on etiology, hearing aid (HA) outcomes and intervention are few, so it is still unknown when and how intervention is optimally provided. READ MORE