18 - Ototoxicity Flashcards
What is tinnitus? What is the mechanism?
- Result of trauma, disease, or xenobiotic toxicity
- Mechanism unknown (central involvement)
- Hair cell dysfunction (central neurotransmission)
What drugs can cause tinnitus?
- Streptomycin, neomycin, indomethacin, doxycycline, furosemide, heavy metals, and high dose caffeine
- Typically salicylates and quinine
Describe audiometry and what each level corresponds to
- Threshold = minimum effective sound capable of evoking a hearing sensation 50% of the time
- 0 dB = normal
- 10-20 dB = mild hearing loss
- 21-40 dB = moderate loss
- > 40 dB = severe loss
What are symptoms of vestibular dysfunction?
- Light-headedness, headache, whirling sensation
- Pt may display nystagmus, ataxia, unsteady gait and posture
Which drugs cause reversible hearing loss?
- Diuretics (acetazolamide, furosemide) -> physiologic dysfunction, loss of hair cells, and edema at stria vascularis
- Inhibition of potassium pump and G protein associated w/ adenylcyclase => decreased potassium activity in the endolymph amd decreased endocochlear potential
- Salicylates
- Erythromycin
- Quinine
- Phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors
Describe salicylates ototoxicity
- Generally mild
- Mechanism unclear -> effect on prostaglandin synthesis may interfere w/ Na+K+ATPase pump function at stria vascularis => decrease in cochlear blood flow => reversible decrease in outer hair cell turgor secondary to membrane permeability changes
- Reversible 24-72 h after d/c of the drug
- Hearing loss typically bilateral and symmetrical
Dose of salicylates required to cause ototoxicity
- Dose dependent
- Daily doses > 2.7 g are associated w/ increased ototoxicity
- Doses > 4 g/day produce tinnitus in 50% of px and hearing loss in ~25% of px
Describe erythromycin ototoxicity
- Mechanism unclear (effects on central auditory pathways)
- Bilateral impairment of hearing at all frequencies associated w/ slurred speech, double vision, and confusion
- PO, IV, IP (dialysis px), topical administration to the ear
Risk factors for erythromycin ototoxicity
- High doses w/ renal or hepatic failure
- IV administration
- Age
- Use w/ other ototoxic agents
- Use w/ inhibitors of erythromycin metabolism
Dose of erythromycin required to cause ototoxicity
- PO doses > 4 g/day
- Dose < 2 g/day has been associated w/ ototoxicity in renal or hepatic failure
Describe phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitor ototoxicity
- Sudden hearing loss (very rare)
- Unilateral, first 24 h
- Causality not confirmed
Which drugs cause irreversible hearing loss?
- Aminoglycosides
- Cisplatinum
Which aminoglycosides are the most ototoxic?
- Neomycin
- Kanamycin
Mechanism of aminoglycoside ototoxicity
Binding to hair cell membrane => membrane disruption, loss of electrolytes, loss in enzyme function, and inhibition of protein synthesis
Risk factors for aminoglycoside ototoxicity
- Severity of illness (hydration state, organ failure)
- Pre-existing hearing loss
- Previous exposure to AGs
- Duration of therapy
- Peak-trough variation
- Other ototoxic drugs (synergistic effects w/ loop diuretics)
- Pre-existing renal failure
- Age, noise exposure, previous ear infection
- Genetic predisposition (cochlear toxicity)