3 - ENT - Otology - Sensorineural deafness - Presbyacusis, Acoustic Neuroma + Sudden sensorineural hearing loss Flashcards
Presbyacusis -what is it? usually where? consider what is unilateral?
age related hearing loss
usually bilateral and symmetrical
if unilateral consider acoustic neuroma
Presbyacusis - what age? which tones affected? what is difficult for patients? mgmt?
begins ~30y - usually >50y
affects high freq tones
speech discrimination against and noisy background is difficult
mgmt - hearing aids
Acoustic neuroma - what is it? always consider if?
slow growing, benign tumour arising form cochlear nerve
if – unilateral/asymmetrical sensorineural hearing deficit
Acoustic neuroma - presentation? investigations?
usually presents with neuro symptoms - cerebellar/raised ICP
Ix - MRI/CT, pure tone audiometry
Acoustic neuroma - mgmt? complications of surgery?
mgmt - surgical removal , gamma knife for large tumours (>3.5m)
complications of surgery - loss of hearing, facial nerve palsy, compromise brainstem blood supply
Sudden sensorineural hearing loss - possible causes?
noise exposure, barotrauma, ototoxic drugs, acoustic neuroma, mumps, TB, MS, vasculopathy
Sudden sensorineural hearing loss - recovery rate?
partial spontaneous recovery in 50%
Sudden sensorineural hearing loss - mgmt? immediate and late
immediate - steroids, carbogen gas (95% O2 + 5% CO2)
later - exclude acoustic neuroma
Sudden sensorineural hearing loss - prognosis
low freq tones recover better
vertigo may persist
young or old = worst prog