As part of a continuing quality improvement program, this project was under
taken to define the frequency of hearing loss in patients admitted to a sur
gical intensive care unit in order to identify patients at risk for impaire
d communication. The study evaluated 168 consecutive admissions over a ten
week period to a ten bed adult surgical intensive care unit in a university
hospital. Patients were screened as close to admission to the ICU as possi
ble with otoscopy, tympanometry, and distortion product otoacoustic emissio
ns. A total of 113 patients (226 ears, mean age 58.0+/-15.8 years) were scr
eened within 1.5+/-1.4 days of ICU admission; 55 of the 168 admissions coul
d not be screened (48 out of 55 due to short ICU stays). Of the 226 ears ev
aluated, 6.6 per cent had abnormal otoscopy and 43.2 per cent abnormal tymp
anograms. OAE failure occurred in 58.4 per cent of ears while OAE results w
ere uninterpretable due to high ambient noise in 2.7 per cent of ears, and
technical difficulty in 3.5 per cent of ears. Mean time for screening was 9
.3 minutes. OAEs provide an efficient screening modality for hearing impair
ment in critically ill adults. The results suggest a significant prevalence
of hearing impairment in the population studied. Mon definitive testing sh
ould be considered when clinically indicated in patients who fail OAE scree
ning.