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Title: Rehabilitation plasticity: influence of hearing aid fitting on frequency discrimination performance near the hearing-loss cut-off. Author: Gabriel D, Veuillet E, Vesson JF, Collet L. Journal: Hear Res; 2006 Mar; 213(1-2):49-57. PubMed ID: 16459036. Abstract: Several studies have already demonstrated that patients with steeply sloping hearing loss of cochlear origin exhibit an improvement in frequency discrimination performance at or around the cut-off frequency. This enhancement cannot be explained in terms of peripheral mechanisms and should rather be interpreted in terms of central reorganization: i.e., injury-induced cortical plasticity. However, the reversibility and time course of such reorganization has not yet been described. The main goal of the present study was therefore to investigate the occurrence of rehabilitation plasticity associated with hearing-aid fitting in human subjects. Nine subjects with steeply sloping hearing loss and who were candidates for auditory rehabilitation were tested. Discrimination-limen-for-frequency (DLF) enhancement was investigated at the frequency with the best DLF (bDLF) for each individual subject before and during auditory rehabilitation (at 1 month, 3 months and 6 months). From 1 month on, frequency discrimination performance decreased significantly at the bDLF frequency, while remaining stable at other frequencies. This normalization may reflect a new central reorganization reversing the initial injury-induced changes in the cortical map. A correlation between subject's age and alteration in DLF at 1 month was also found, suggesting that plasticity operates faster in younger patients.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]