Hi:
I have four children, the youngest of which is 3 1/2 with sever speech delay. Briefly, he had trouble passing his newborn screening, but after many attempts the technician said he did pass. During his first year of life, he had over eight ear infections, several burst eardrums. After moving when he was 1 1/2, we finally got ear tubes to stop the infections (we fought his original pediatricians to no avail). He did very poorly on some booth hearing tests, and he was sent for a sedated ABR. The ENT there refused to give him the ABR, saying his booth tests weren't so bad. Finally, after a year of wrangling back and forth, my son got his sedated ABR. The audiologist that performed the test said at the time she was concerned that there was some extraneous noises that made my son jump during the test, but she did not put this in her report. The report came back with very ambiguous results - mild/moderate bilateral hearing loss in high frequencies, but "should not affect his ability to learn speech." New every doctor I go see looks at this ABR report and dismisses the possibility of hearing loss and immediately assumes autism. If my son fit the criteria for autism, I would pursue treatment/therapy for him. I am not trying to avoid an autism label. I just want an accurate diagnosis. My question here is - can ABR results be inaccurate? I am terrified that my little boy is HOH and no one is going to help him because of one report! I've been learning ASL on my own and teaching him as best I can, but I want to get him every kind of help available and I can't do that without a diagnosis. Any advice would be great!
I have four children, the youngest of which is 3 1/2 with sever speech delay. Briefly, he had trouble passing his newborn screening, but after many attempts the technician said he did pass. During his first year of life, he had over eight ear infections, several burst eardrums. After moving when he was 1 1/2, we finally got ear tubes to stop the infections (we fought his original pediatricians to no avail). He did very poorly on some booth hearing tests, and he was sent for a sedated ABR. The ENT there refused to give him the ABR, saying his booth tests weren't so bad. Finally, after a year of wrangling back and forth, my son got his sedated ABR. The audiologist that performed the test said at the time she was concerned that there was some extraneous noises that made my son jump during the test, but she did not put this in her report. The report came back with very ambiguous results - mild/moderate bilateral hearing loss in high frequencies, but "should not affect his ability to learn speech." New every doctor I go see looks at this ABR report and dismisses the possibility of hearing loss and immediately assumes autism. If my son fit the criteria for autism, I would pursue treatment/therapy for him. I am not trying to avoid an autism label. I just want an accurate diagnosis. My question here is - can ABR results be inaccurate? I am terrified that my little boy is HOH and no one is going to help him because of one report! I've been learning ASL on my own and teaching him as best I can, but I want to get him every kind of help available and I can't do that without a diagnosis. Any advice would be great!