Ask the Audiologist webinar

Posted by tonyinmi @tonyinmi, Nov 15, 2020

Hearing Loss Association on America, Michigan State Association (HLAA-MI) will be hosting a Zoom webinar panel discussion. The topic is "Ask the Audiologist". You will be able to get answers to your questions.
To participate, people have to first send an email to events@hearingloss-ggr.org to get the Zoom link. They'll then need to register.
Wednesday, Nov 18, from 6:30 PM until 8:00 PM.
Panelists:
Erica Mandrick of Michigan ENT and Allergy
Darcy Jaarsma of Spectrum Health Audiology
Michelle Rankin of Rankin Audiology & Hearing
Kim Kragt of Constance Brown Hearing Centers

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Hearing Loss Support Group.

@barbb

@joyces Hi Joyce, thanks for your reply, much of which I recall since it has the data in it from your initial comments about VRT that had such impact on me and is the sole reason why I went about scheduling VRT for myself. The only difference from when you initially wrote about this is that my wonderful memory 🙁 told me it was from Julie, rather than you. You say, "VRT is special PT aimed at balance." Non VRT PT can also be aimed at balance so the issue to me is when does a person with balance issues choose to go to regular PT and when to VRT. What I understand so far is that the choice between the 2 therapies is determined by the cause of the balance problem and/or symptoms (in addition to balance alone). What do you think?

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Out-of-order response to BarbB: I continue to believe that it's far better to see a VRT specialist for any balance problem. You might find a great PT who has taken the time to learn more about balance, but that's probably not the norm. Left untreated, a simple balance problem may progress into the more "entertaining" aspects of V&V (vomiting and vertigo). Also, not everyone has ready access to a VRT specialist. There's no one in our little town, but the town 45 minutes south has one PT who has spent a lot of time learning about balance, so, although she's not listed as a VRT specialist, she does know a great deal. I decided to cut to the chase and go to the Vestibular Center two hours north; it was one of the first places to offer true VRT and is a sort of hub for vestibular disorders. Another issue with balance is that, untreated, it often leads to back pain because you need to hold yourself stiffly in order to stay upright while standing still. During the four years I was very ill (40 years ago), I knew nothing about VRT, which was a very new idea at the time. I was doing lots of trade shows, and I had horrible back pain due to standing in a booth convincing people to buy my products! Now, although I have stenosis, arthritis, and a herniated disk, I rarely have any back pain, and that's caused by standing in one place for more than an hour, like while assembling hundreds of sandwiches! I think my back also benefits from lots of lifting: every week I drive two hours each way to pick up donated bread for our Backpacks for Kids program, and the 500 loaves weigh roughly 800 pounds, each lifted off a tray into a tote, totes lifted up into the van, then stacked in the van. Lots of lifting, and it's repeated when I unload and distribute everything.

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@barbb

@julieo4 Thanks Julie for setting me straight!

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I wish you the best of luck with treatment. Let us know how it works for you.

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@julieo4 Thanks Julie, I'll take all the good luck I can get! 🙂

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@joyces

Response to barbb about VRT: VRT is special PT aimed at balance issues. You have a primary balance system, your inner ear, but it can be damaged. In addition, your inner ear works less effectively as you age, whether or not there's additional damage. Your secondary balance system is vision, but using your eyes to balance leads to imbalance and, in many cases, dizziness and/or nausea. Every time you move your head, you lose your focal point, so using vision to balance leads to problems and increases your imbalance. You need to learn to use your third balance system, proprioception, or the information provided by your feet, ankles, knees, etc.--in other words, your body. Simply put, proprioception is what enables you to know which way and how much to lean against the wind when you're standing on an exposed point.

Hearing and balance are closely associated. The acoustic and vestibular nerves are side by side and are often twisted together; what affects one can easily affect the other, so many HOH people also have balance issues. In addition, both hearing and balance function decline as we age. I believe that all older people should learn to do some simple VRT...and do it every day. It will enable you to feel more stable, and it will also improve your eye-hand coordination (no more slicing your fingers instead of the veggies!).

Good news: VRT does work! Unlike most exercise, VRT is not difficult, doesn't require lots of special equipment. Bad news: you must do it every day for it to be effective. Once you learn proprioception, you can do VRT while you're doing something else. For example, I live on a gravel road and our mailbox is a quarter mile away. Every day, when I walk out to get the mail, I spend at least half the walk with my eyes closed, thinking about what my feet feel. I also have specific exercises, but I've learned that really concentrating on what my feet feel while I've "shut off" vision is the most effective thing I can do. If you really work on VRT every single day, you WILL see real improvement in a month or less.

I have a godawful disease, Meniere's, which takes both hearing and vision. I had my first serious problems with it about 40 years ago, in my 40s, after I quit taking birth control pills. I began to have increasingly bad crises every month within a day of the start of a period, so the connection between hormones and horrible imbalance, vomit fests, crises that each lasted 12-15 hours was obvious. It took my primary doc and me four years to stumble upon a safe, effective form of hormone replacement (HRT). At that time, there were hardly any PTs specializing in VRT, so I learned it long distance while working on publishing a book about Meniere's: the author sent me exercises via e-mail. The combination of good hormones and VRT so changed my life that I continued VRT every day. Then, over a year ago, I suddenly went bilateral, meaning my so-called "good" ear was now affected as well. Initially, the greatest problem was almost total deafness, but crises soon began, until I was forced to lie still, vomiting, for hours every day. I finally found a doc in this small town willing to prescribe HRT, and, not only did the vomiting and vertigo cease, but my hearing returned to about where it had been before I had gone bilateral! Still, I was having issues with lack of balance, so I scheduled a appt. with a VRT specialist. I felt that it would do me good to see someone who actually knew about VRT, since I really hadn't all those years ago. After less than a month of biweekly appts with lots of daily work, I had normal balance and could do active things again. At 78, I still do instream data collection for our state fisheries agency, in a small stream that cascades down a very steep canyon. Once again, I'm able to walk and wade 6.5 miles to do the basic surveys I've done for years, plus install temperature monitors to track summer temps. I can drive on curving roads without a problem, hike anywhere my old body is willing to go, and live a more than normal life for someone my age. VRT gave me my life back!

So, go to your appt. with an open mind and be willing to work every day. You will soon feel more stable, more able to do normal things, and you'll feel much better about yourself. It's well worth it!

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So much good information! thanks!

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@barbb

So much good information! thanks!

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Reply to Barb B: Best of luck with your first VRT appt! Please let us know how it goes.

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@joyces

Reply to Barb B: Best of luck with your first VRT appt! Please let us know how it goes.

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@joyces, Will do!

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@barbb

@julieo4, It is personally very helpful to have this "reminder" of all that should by now already be firmly ensconced "upstairs"! But one question regarding what you say here. It has been my understanding that if a person has a hearing aid minus the T coil, at least in many instances, and then decides they want one, the audie can then install a T coil at little additional expense. No???

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Installing a telecoil in a hearing aid that doesn't have one built in, is probably not feaseable in most instances. It's a matter of 'space' in the hearing instrument. What does happen, often, is that the t-coil is there, but it has not been activated. In that case, it can be activated. I know that in some of the older hearing aids it was possible to add a telecoil, but I've not heard of it being done in recent years. If anyone has had that kind of good luck, please share your experience.

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HLAA-MI and the Greater Grand Rapids Chapter will be hosting another virtual "Ask The Audiologist" panel discussion on March 17, 2021 at 6:30 PM EST. See the attached flyer. We'll feature 4 audiologists with various backgrounds that can answer questions in the fields of pediatrics, education, clinical, hearing aids, cochlear implants and more. The audiologists will be:
Alyssa B Eminhizer of WMU’s Charles Van Riper Language, Speech ad Hearing Clinic in Kalamazoo
Terry McIlvaine of Dr. Kasewurm's Professional Hearing Services in St. Joseph, MI
Heidi Schmeltzer of Spectrum Health Lakeland ENT in Niles, MI
James Thornburg of Hearing Resources / ENT Center of Grand Rapids

CART services will be provided.
You'll need to register since attendance is limited by our Zoom license. Registration is a two-step process. First, email atap@hearingloss-ggr.org. Next, you'll receive an email with the registration instructions.
Let me know if you have any questions
Tony in Michigan

Shared files

ATAPMarch2021PDF (ATAPMarch2021PDF.pdf)

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Just a reminder about this weeks "Ask the Audiologist" panel discussion. It happens March 17 at 6:30 PM EST. Problems with your audiologist and don't know who to ask, perhaps our panelists can help. Hope to see you there.
You'll need to register since attendance is limited by our Zoom license. Registration is a two-step process. First, email atap@hearingloss-ggr.org. Next, you'll receive an email with the registration instructions.
Let me know if you have any questions
Tony in Michigan

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