Abstract
We studied the extended high frequency hearing of 573 white, urban, mean 13.8-year-old unselected children in Tampere, Finland. All their ear-related morbidity had been recorded since their birth and they had been examined at the ages of 7 months, 2 years, and some of them at 5 years. The extended high frequency audiometry was measured from 10 to 18 kHz, with 1 kHz steps, and the results were related to the number of attacks of acute otitis media (AOM) (0, 1–2, 3–7 and ≥8) they had experienced. The mean pure tone hearing thresholds varied from 10.7 dB at 10 kHz to 37.0 dB at 18 kHz in the right ears and between 11.6 dB at 10 kHz and 37.4 dB at 18 kHz in the left ears. Among those with ≥8 attacks of AOM the thresholds were highest, the difference between them and each of the first 3 groups being statistically significant at 13 and 14 kHz. From 11 to 16 kHz the same difference was significant between the last (≥8 AOM) and at least 2 of the first 3 AOM groups. Numerous attacks of AOM may have a harmful effect on high frequency hearing in the long term.