Praxis of Otorhinolaryngology

Hanifi Korkmaz1, Sevilay Hançer Tecimer2

1Malatya Turgut Özal University, Vocational School of Health Services, Malatya, Türkiye
2Department of Otolaryngology, Malatya Turgut Özal University Faculty of Medicine, Malatya, Türkiye

Keywords: Auditory perception, postural balance, sensorineural hearing loss, sensory integration, virtual reality, visual perception.

Abstract

Objectives: This study examined whether sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) severity affects the sensory components of postural control in asymptomatic young to middle-aged adults under increasing multisensory load using a virtual reality (VR)-based Clinical Test of Sensory Interaction on Balance (CTSIB).

Patients and Methods: Between October 2025 and February 2026, a prospective cross-sectional study was performed on 53 participants (23 males, 30 females; mean age: 26.51±4.27 years; range: 18 to 57 years). Participants were categorized into three groups according to their hearing status: the healthy control group (n = 24), the mild SNHL group (n = 21), and the moderate SNHL group (n = 8). Postural control was assessed under four conditions: C1 (silent-standard vision), C2 (music-standard vision), C3 (silent-optokinetic vision), and C4 (music-optokinetic vision). Composite balance scores and VR-CTSIB sensory subcomponents were analyzed using condition-wise nonparametric tests. Subjective workload was evaluated using the mental demand and effort subscales of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Task Load Index.

Results: Composite balance performance differed between groups in a condition-dependent manner, with greater separation under higher multisensory load. Somatosensory and visual components showed increasing group differences, whereas vestibular-based strategies diverged only under multisensory conflict. Visual preference differed only in the music-standard vision condition, indicating a context-dependent shift in sensory weighting. Subjective workload increased with sensory conflict, while between-group differences diminished under the highest load.

Conclusion: In asymptomatic adults, hearing loss is associated with condition-specific postural control vulnerability that emerges under auditory-visual sensory conflict, supporting impaired sensory reweighting rather than a global balance deficit. Virtual reality-based CTSIB protocols provide a sensitive framework for detecting these effects.

Citation: Korkmaz H, Hançer Tecimer S. Comparative effects of visual and auditory stimuli on the sensory components of postural control: A study in individuals with sensorineural hearing loss. Praxis Otorhinolaryngol 2026;14(2):122-133. https://doi. org/10.5606/kbbu.2026.30922.