Auditory processing disorder (APD) - Diagnosis and treatment (2024)

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Diagnosis

To diagnose auditory processing disorder (APD), your health care team may ask questions about your symptoms and how long you have had them, as well as order tests.

Several specialists on your health care team might help diagnose you or your child with auditory processing disorder (APD). For children, the team might include teachers, who look at learning and attention issues. For children and adults, the team might include mental health professionals, called psychologists, who look at how the mind works. And speech-language pathologists can look at the use of language.

A hearing specialist called an audiologist may do tests to see what is happening when you or your child hear sounds. These tests might include:

  • Tympanometry. This test can tell if the eardrum isn't moving well. The eardrum needs to move for good hearing. For this test, the audiologist places a soft probe in the ear canal. Then they send small bits of air pressure toward the ear. The probe measures how much the eardrum moves in response to the air.
  • Acoustic reflex test. This test shows what happens in the ear when it hears a loud sound.
  • Auditory brainstem response. This test shows how well the inner ear, called the cochlea, and the brain pathways for hearing are working. An audiologist places sensors around the ear and on the head. The sensors connect to a computer.

    Short clicking sounds come through headphones worn during the test. The computer records how the nerves between the ears and the brain respond to the sounds.

  • Evoked potential test. This test shows how well sound travels along the nerves that connect the ears to the brain. For this test, an audiologist places sensors on the head. The sensors connect to a computer. Short clicking sounds come through headphones worn during the test.

    This lets an audiologist see how well sound gets to different parts of the brain. It also shows if anything is blocking the nerves that link the ears to the brain.

Treatment

Not everyone with auditory processing disorder (APD) needs treatment. If you or your child need treatment, there are many approaches. Every person with APD has different needs. Your health care team can work with you to help you. Your or your child's treatment might include:

  • Hearing aids and listening devices. Your health care team may suggest that you use hearing aids with wireless listening devices. Listening devices help direct sound to you. They get sound from the source to your hearing aid.

    Frequency modulated, or FM, systems send sounds to you so you can hear them better. They work with a hearing aid and direct sounds to it. These systems help make it easier to hear sounds in noisy environments.

  • Auditory training. Auditory training, also called hearing rehabilitation, helps you adjust to hearing loss. You may train with an audiologist, a speech-language pathologist or both. You may train one-on-one with a therapist or as part of a group.

    During auditory training, you learn to tell one type of sound from another. You do this by listening to sounds that are louder and softer, given quickly and slowly. Sounds come from different directions. You also learn to tell the difference between speech sounds, which affects the meaning of the words you hear.

    Auditory training helps the brain tell the difference between the many sounds you hear every day. The goal is to help you feel like you're able to talk with others more.

  • Computer-based training. Computer-based programs can help train the brain to recognize and understand sounds. These programs are like auditory training, but you do them online or with a computer program.

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Lifestyle and home remedies

There are simple steps you can take to manage auditory processing disorder (APD). For instance:

  • Try using a remote microphone to improve how well you can hear in a noisy room.
  • Move closer to the person who is speaking.
  • Think about covering surfaces that make sounds echo, such as open or empty spaces.
  • Move away from other sources of noise, such as a fan.
  • In a class or at a meeting, ask someone to take notes for you or get a written copy of what was said.
  • Ask for anything important to be in writing.
  • Use subtitles when watching TV.

Coping and support

Having auditory processing disorder (APD) can make you feel left out of everyday events. It can make you feel lonely. Auditory training as part of your treatment may help you or your child learn how to cope with hearing loss and adjust to it.

Auditory training might help you or your child learn to talk to others better and help them talk to you. This can help you feel less alone and more connected to others.

Preparing for your appointment

You or your child might start by seeing your family health care professional. For testing, you or your child might be referred to a specialist in hearing, called an audiologist.

Here's some information to help you get ready for your appointment.

What you can do

Make a list of:

  • Your or your child's symptoms, including any that don't seem linked to the reason for your appointment, and when they began.
  • Key personal information, including major stresses, recent life changes and family medical history.
  • All medicines, vitamins, or other supplements you or your child take, including the doses.
  • Questions to ask your health care professional.

Take a family member or friend along, if possible, to help you hear or remember the information you get.

For auditory processing disorder, some basic questions to ask include:

  • What's likely causing my or my child's symptoms?
  • Other than the most likely cause, what are other possible causes for these symptoms?
  • What tests are needed?
  • Is this condition likely to go away or be long-lasting?
  • What's the best course of action?
  • Are there brochures or other printed material I can have? What websites do you suggest?

Be sure to ask all the questions you have about this condition.

What to expect from your doctor

Your health care team is likely to ask you questions, such as:

  • Are the symptoms constant or do they come and go?
  • How bad are your symptoms?
  • What, if anything, helps you hear better?
  • What, if anything, makes it harder for you to hear?

By Mayo Clinic Staff

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Sept. 30, 2023

Print

  1. Auditory processing disorders. American Academy of Audiology. https://www.audiology.org/consumers-and-patients/hearing-and-balance/auditory-processing-disorders/. Accessed June 22, 2023.
  2. Understanding auditory processing disorders in children. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. https://www.asha.org/public/hearing/understanding-auditory-processing-disorders-in-children/. Accessed June 22, 2023.
  3. Cifu DX, et al., eds. Auditory, vestibular and visual impairments. In: Braddom's Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 6th ed. Elsevier; 2021. https://www.clinicalkey.com. Accessed June 22, 2023.
  4. Liu P, et al. Electrophysiological screening for children with suspected auditory processing disorder: A systematic review. Frontiers in Neurology. 2021; doi:10.3389/fneur.2021.692840.
  5. Sardone R, et al. The age-related central auditory processing disorder: Silent impairment of the cognitive ear. Frontiers in Neuroscience. 2019; doi:10.3389/fnins.2019.00619.
  6. Central Auditory Processing Disorder. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. https://www.asha.org/practice-portal/clinical-topics/central-auditory-processing-disorder/. Accessed June 22, 2023.
  7. Health Education & Content Services. Auditory processing disorder. Mayo Clinic; 2023.

Auditory processing disorder (APD)

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Auditory processing disorder (APD) - Diagnosis and treatment (2024)
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