Details

  • 30 Minutes
  • $120.00
  • Gold Card Discount May Apply ($96.00)

If you are booked in for an Adult Diagnostic Hearing test, you will be receiving a comprehensive diagnostic assessment. In most cases, a copy of your test result can be provided to you straight after your appointment. If you have been diagnosed with a hearing loss before, we strongly recommend an annual test to monitor your hearing. If this however is your first hearing test, we encourage you to ask as many questions as needed either before, during or after your appointment. We highly encourage bringing a friend or family member along to your appointment. Please find a brief description, of the separate components of an adult diagnostic hearing test, below. Each separate part only takes a couple of minutes with the entire test taking up to 30 minutes.

Please note – Our Adult Diagnostic Hearing Assessments meet or exceed requirements for:

  • Referrals from GPs, Ear- Nose and Throat Specialists, Speech-Language Pathologists, and other referrers
  • ACC Hearing Assessments
  • Veterans’ Affairs Assessments
  • CAA hearing tests (Pilots and Crew)
  • Pre-Employment Audiograms
  • Immigration Medical Hearing Tests

What’s Involved

As within all other medical fields, taking a thorough case history is of utmost importance. We aim to get a good understanding of what brought you to our clinic in the first instance as well as all relevant information about your hearing and hearing health. In today’s digitally driven world, most (if not all) of our work is paperless. If you booked your appointment online, you may have already filled out a digital copy of our History Form which means we will take our time to go over each point, clarifying and expanding on your answers. Feel free to ask questions throughout your appointment. This part will take approximately 1 minute or less.

During this part of the test, we will use an Otoscope to primarily assess the outer ear/lobe, the ear canal, and the ear drum. We will be paying attention to the outer ear anatomy, possible obstruction in the canal due to wax, a foreign body, or bony growths called Exostoses, possible infections in the canal, perforations/holes in the eardrum, fluid behind the eardrum due to middle ear infections, and/or any other unusual findings. We sometimes use Video Otoscopy to take and store an image of the canal and eardrum. This can be very useful as a reference further down the track, and by sharing it with you and/or other medical professionals. We do occasionally come across patients who would rather not see down the canal of their own ears! We respect that and will ask you beforehand what your preference may be. This part of the test takes only a couple of minutes.

PLEASE NOTE: If you have too much wax build-up in your ears to safely continue testing, we do have wax removal (via micro-suctioning) facilities available and will proceed with wax removal, if you consent.

Next, we will assess the function of your ear drum, your three little hearing bones located in your middle ear, as well as a reflex response of the smallest muscle in your body, the Stapedial muscle. This test is completely objective which means we do not require a response from you. The only thing we WILL require from you, is to not talk or swallow for a minute or two. (Please don’t stop breathing though! Just do not swallow.)

The pressure test: We will put a soft silicon plug in your ear. You will hear a low hum and you will feel a pressure change, much like when you want to equalize your ears when you are flying in an aeroplane. This sensation will only last seconds. This test is useful in determining if there could be a perforation/hole in the drum or if there may be an outer ear- or middle ear infection. It may give us information on the integrity of the little hearing bones in your middle ear. It may even give us information about the Eustachian tube (a narrow tube which runs from the middle ear space to the back of the throat, responsible for equalizing the pressure behind the eardrum).

The reflex test: Immediately after the pressure test, you will hear a series of louder sounds. The smallest muscle in your body (the Stapedial muscle) contracts in the presence of loud sounds to protect the hearing organ. Our equipment will record the presence or absence of this reflex. This part of the test will take a couple of minutes.

Diagnostic Distortion Product Otoacoustic Emission (DPOAE) testing is a simple, fast, and objective way of evaluating the integrity and function of tiny hair cells in the hearing organ, the cochlea. A soft sponge tip will be placed in the ear canal. Apart from sending sounds to the inner ear, the probe tip also measures a tiny echo which comes BACK from the inner ear. DPOAE testing is not a test of hearing, but rather a tool used to tell the difference between types of hearing losses. It is safe to use on all age groups from infants to the elderly and is a reliable method of cross-checking results obtained from other parts of the test battery. This part of the test will take a couple of minutes.

You will be most familiar with this part of the test. While seated in a soundproof room, you will be given a button to press, every time you hear a sound through headphones (or insert earphones). We will be testing one ear at a time. We will be testing your ears from base sounds all the way up to treble sounds, like the notes on a piano keyboard. The softest level at which you can reliably detect a sound, is called a threshold. These threshold points will plot a graph. If you have normal hearing, your graph will be in a straight line, close to the top of the diagram. The further down the graph falls, the bigger the degree of hearing loss. This part of the test shows your DEGREE of hearing loss.

This part of the test requires you to also press a button when you hear a sound. Only this time the sound will come from a vibrating bone conductor which sits behind the ear via a headband. If you have normal hearing, we will not need to do this part. However, if you present with a hearing loss, Bone Conduction testing is required to give us more information on the TYPE of hearing loss.

Words in Quiet: During this part of the test, we will be playing speech sounds in a quiet setting, to each ear individually, but at different loudness levels. We start off at a comfortable loudness level, but we turn the volume down as we go along. You are asked to repeat the words that you have heard. When the speech words ultimately get too soft, you will be encouraged to guess what you thought you heard! We do this test as a cross check principle, to confirm that your other test results are reliable.

Speech in Noise: The second part of the test changes slightly, in that we will be asking you to repeat full sentences. The sentences are presented in a noisy background.

We use this test to help us get a better understanding of how your hearing and hearing loss impacts your ability to hear speech in quiet settings but also in noisy situations. It is a powerful counselling tool and can, to a certain extent, predict how well you could potentially do with hearing speech while wearing hearing aids.

Discussion of Results

During this final part of your appointment, we will explain your test results, and answer any questions you may have. We can instantly provide you with a copy of your test results and will, at your request and with your permission, write a report to any other professionals. We will give you clear direction on what the next steps would be if a referral is required for further investigation and management.