Thursday, 14 November 2013
Wednesday, 6 November 2013
About us
Nadiya Soomar (B. Communication
Pathology (Audiology)) and her team of qualified audiologists run a fully
equipped private hearing healthcare facility in the heart of Glenwood. Providing their patients with the best
personal service, they can assist with all ear and hearing related concerns to
guarantee a better quality of life. “We conduct extensive assessments and
follow up with the necessary management and rehabilitation to provide patients
with long term satisfaction. At our practice we work with various medical doctors, health care practitioners and hearing aid
companies to offer patients a wide range of options,” says Nadiya.
Their services include:
·
Diagnostic hearing assessments for adults and
children
·
Hearing aids
·
Aural rehabilitation
·
School hearing screening
·
Industrial hearing assessments
·
Neonatal hearing assessments
·
Central auditory processing assessments
The fee charge for services provided are based on most
medical aid rates.
Monday, 16 September 2013
Saturday, 14 September 2013
Hearing & Hearing Loss
Hearing and
Hearing loss
Nadiya Soomar Audiologists
031
– 2012081 / 076 105 6688
www.nsaudiology.co.za
www.nsaudiology.blogspot.com
Every
aspect of an individual’s life is enriched with sound. Every sound brings forth
a memory, a way we can identify with the world. We can hear it in the crashing
of waves upon the shore, pattering of rain upon a window, the singing of birds,
a crowded room resonating with many voices. The sense of hearing enables us to
experience the world around us. It allows us to collect, process and interpret
sounds continuously and without effort. We may take this special sense of
communication for granted. However, communication is one of man's most
important skills, and communication depends on the sense of hearing. For children, hearing sets them on a path to
the development of speech, intellectual and psychosocial skills which prepare
them for educational attainment.
Hearing
impairment is the most common sensory loss in the human population, affecting
more than 250 million people in the world. About 3 in every 1,000 babies
worldwide are born with hearing impairment, making it the most common birth
defect. Inserting a great importance to awareness of this difficulty owing to
the impact it has on the quality of life individuals lead.
In order to understand how
and why hearing loss happens, it helps to know how the ear works. The ear is
made up of three different sections: the outer ear, middle ear, and inner ear.
These parts work together so you can hear and process sounds. The outer ear is
the part you can see. Its function is to pick up sound waves and thereafter
these waves travel through the outer ear canal.
When the sound waves reach
the eardrum between the outer and middle ear, the eardrum starts to vibrate.
When the eardrum vibrates, it moves three tiny bones within the ear. They help
sound move along on its journey into the inner ear.
The vibrations then travel
to the inner ear were the cochlea is situated,
which is filled with liquid and lined with cells that have thousands of
tiny hairs on their surfaces. The sound vibrations make the tiny hairs move
which send the sound information to your hearing nerve, which then transmit it
to your brain, thereby allowing you to hear.
There are different types
of hearing loss: conductive, sensory and mixed (conductive and
sensory combined).
A
Conductive hearing loss occurs when there is
a problem with a part of the outer or middle ear. Most conductive hearing loss
is temporary as there is medical treatment available in most situations.
A
Sensory hearing loss happens when the
cochlea is not working efficiently because the tiny hair cells are damaged or
destroyed. Sensory hearing impairment is almost always permanent and the
ability to hear speech normally may be affected.
People
of all ages experience gradual hearing loss, often due to the natural aging
process or long exposure to loud noise. It can occur because a person was born with
parts of the ear that didn't form correctly and don't work well. Other problems
can happen later due to injury or illness, including ear infections, listening
to very loud music (especially through headphones or ear buds) and other
serious infections such as meningitis.
Monday, 26 August 2013
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