Four pediatric patients whose bilateral auditory cortices were damaged by herpes encephalitis at an early age were studied. Their brain CT and MRI scans demonstrated common bilateral lesions of the auditory cortices. Their auditory perception was investigated by means of behavioral and objective hearing tests and auditory perception tests. All four patients showed mild or moderate hearing loss in the behavioral hearing test and normal auditory brainstem responses but did not manifest total deafness. Moreover, perception tests involving speech, environmental sounds and music demonstrated that most auditory perception ability had been lost in all patients. On reaching school age, the patients were enrolled in schools for the deaf or special schools for handicapped children.
The auditory behaviors of the hearing-impaired children with no other problems showed constant changes with age after hearing aid fitting. However, among the 28 hearing-impaired children with multiple handicaps, 17 showed improvement in auditory behaviors, 5 showed no improvement in auditory behaviors because of the associated severe motor and mental retardation, and epilepsy, and 6 were unable to adapt to wearing hearing aids.
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