ototoxic deafness - traducción al árabe
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ototoxic deafness - traducción al árabe

HUMAN DISEASE
Word deafness; Word-deafness; Pure Word Deafness; Pure word deafness

ototoxic deafness      
‎ صَمَمُ تَسَمُّمِ الأُذُن‎
unilateral hearing loss         
HEARING IMPAIRMENT
Single sided deafness; Hearing loss, unilateral; Single-sided deafness
‎ فَقْدُ السَّمْعِ الوَحِيْدُ الجَانِب‎
nerve deafness         
  • Figure 7: Response of the basilar membrane to a pure tone.
  • Figure 8: Response of the basilar membrane to a pure tone, when there is a dead region.
  • Noise Exposure Limits
  • Figure 9: Psychoacoustical tuning curve.
  • Figure 4: Neural tuning curve for normal hearing.
  • Figure 5: Neural tuning curve for OHC loss. Adapted from.<ref name="Moore-Whurr" />
  • Figure 6: Neural tuning curve for OHC front row loss and IHC loss. Adapted from.<ref name="Moore-Whurr" />
TYPE OF HEARING LOSS
Sensorineural hearing impairment; Sensorineural; Hearing loss, sensorineural; Sensorineural deafness; SNHL; Nerve deafness; Sensorineural auditory loss; Congenital nerve deafness; Sudden deafness; Sensory-neural hearing loss; Idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss; Sudden sensorineural hearing loss; Congenital sensorineural deafness; Neurosensory deafness; SSNHL
‎ صَمَمٌ عَصَبِيّ‎

Definición

word deafness
¦ noun an inability to identify spoken words, resulting from a brain defect.

Wikipedia

Auditory verbal agnosia

Auditory verbal agnosia (AVA), also known as pure word deafness, is the inability to comprehend speech. Individuals with this disorder lose the ability to understand language, repeat words, and write from dictation. Some patients with AVA describe hearing spoken language as meaningless noise, often as though the person speaking was doing so in a foreign language. However, spontaneous speaking, reading, and writing are preserved. The maintenance of the ability to process non-speech auditory information, including music, also remains relatively more intact than spoken language comprehension. Individuals who exhibit pure word deafness are also still able to recognize non-verbal sounds. The ability to interpret language via lip reading, hand gestures, and context clues is preserved as well. Sometimes, this agnosia is preceded by cortical deafness; however, this is not always the case. Researchers have documented that in most patients exhibiting auditory verbal agnosia, the discrimination of consonants is more difficult than that of vowels, but as with most neurological disorders, there is variation among patients.

Auditory verbal agnosia (AVA) is not the same as auditory agnosia; patients with (nonverbal) auditory agnosia have a relatively more intact speech comprehension system despite their impaired recognition of nonspeech sounds.