Rinne Test Results: How Badly Can We Be Mistaken?

Objective To establish the extent to which sound amplitudes delivered by a vibrating tuning fork change around its long axis and to evaluate whether such differences in amplitude might change the results of the Rinne test. Study Design Experimental measurements. Setting Laboratory setting. Methods S...

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Main Authors: Maciej J. Wrobel MD, PhD, Bogdan F. Bogacz PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-03-01
Series:OTO Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2473974X21996998
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spelling doaj-9c901d94a06c4a1fbf7ece24685f4b0a2021-03-13T04:04:09ZengSAGE PublishingOTO Open2473-974X2021-03-01510.1177/2473974X21996998Rinne Test Results: How Badly Can We Be Mistaken?Maciej J. Wrobel MD, PhD0Bogdan F. Bogacz PhD1Department of Otolaryngology, Collegium Medicum Nicolaus Copernicus University, Bydgoszcz, PolandM. Smoluchowski Institute of Physics, Jagiellonian University, Kraków, PolandObjective To establish the extent to which sound amplitudes delivered by a vibrating tuning fork change around its long axis and to evaluate whether such differences in amplitude might change the results of the Rinne test. Study Design Experimental measurements. Setting Laboratory setting. Methods Setup I: a vibrating tuning fork was handheld and manually rotated around its long axis next to a sound recording device (the simulated ear) in order to record sound amplitude data at a full range of angles relative to the device; files were split into segments in which sound amplitude changed: A (from a maximum to a minimum) and B (from a minimum to a maximum). Setup II: a vibrating tuning fork was machine-rotated, and the angle of rotation, along with the sound amplitude, was automatically recorded through a single full rotation. Results The angles of 0° and 180° (which equate to the established best practice in Rinne testing) were associated with the highest sound amplitudes. All other angles decreased sound amplitude. The greatest decrease in amplitude was recorded at 51° and 130°. This difference ranged from 9.8 to 34.7 dB, depending on the initial amplitude. Conclusion The outcome of a Rinne test can be affected if attention is not paid to the precise angle at which the tuning fork is held relative to the ear. The potential of this effect will be greater when high background noise or patient hearing loss requires that the tuning fork be vigorously excited to obtain high sound amplitudes.https://doi.org/10.1177/2473974X21996998
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maciej J. Wrobel MD, PhD
Bogdan F. Bogacz PhD
spellingShingle Maciej J. Wrobel MD, PhD
Bogdan F. Bogacz PhD
Rinne Test Results: How Badly Can We Be Mistaken?
OTO Open
author_facet Maciej J. Wrobel MD, PhD
Bogdan F. Bogacz PhD
author_sort Maciej J. Wrobel MD, PhD
title Rinne Test Results: How Badly Can We Be Mistaken?
title_short Rinne Test Results: How Badly Can We Be Mistaken?
title_full Rinne Test Results: How Badly Can We Be Mistaken?
title_fullStr Rinne Test Results: How Badly Can We Be Mistaken?
title_full_unstemmed Rinne Test Results: How Badly Can We Be Mistaken?
title_sort rinne test results: how badly can we be mistaken?
publisher SAGE Publishing
series OTO Open
issn 2473-974X
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Objective To establish the extent to which sound amplitudes delivered by a vibrating tuning fork change around its long axis and to evaluate whether such differences in amplitude might change the results of the Rinne test. Study Design Experimental measurements. Setting Laboratory setting. Methods Setup I: a vibrating tuning fork was handheld and manually rotated around its long axis next to a sound recording device (the simulated ear) in order to record sound amplitude data at a full range of angles relative to the device; files were split into segments in which sound amplitude changed: A (from a maximum to a minimum) and B (from a minimum to a maximum). Setup II: a vibrating tuning fork was machine-rotated, and the angle of rotation, along with the sound amplitude, was automatically recorded through a single full rotation. Results The angles of 0° and 180° (which equate to the established best practice in Rinne testing) were associated with the highest sound amplitudes. All other angles decreased sound amplitude. The greatest decrease in amplitude was recorded at 51° and 130°. This difference ranged from 9.8 to 34.7 dB, depending on the initial amplitude. Conclusion The outcome of a Rinne test can be affected if attention is not paid to the precise angle at which the tuning fork is held relative to the ear. The potential of this effect will be greater when high background noise or patient hearing loss requires that the tuning fork be vigorously excited to obtain high sound amplitudes.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2473974X21996998
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