Ear 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two tests used in the newborn hearing screening programme?

A

Automated oto-acoustic emission (AOAE)
Automated auditory brainstem response (AABR).

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2
Q

What happens if a child fails the newborn hearing screening programme?

A

Stages >

  • automated OAE
  • repeat automated OAE - if no clear response is detected in the first test and
  • automated ABR.

> referred to the local centre or hospital for further investigations, including

  • tympanometry
  • DIAGNOSTIC OAE
  • DIAGNOSTIC ABR

Both of the these diagnostic tests give thresholds where as the automated ones just give a pass/fail

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3
Q

Causes of hearing impairment in child

A

Genetic factors
Congenital infections (TORCH: toxoplasmosis, rubella,
CMV, herpes simplex)
Meningitis
Intensive care unit for more than 48 hours
Craniofacial abnormalities.

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4
Q

What sound intensity level is required to elicit stapedial reflexes?

A

85dB

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5
Q

Stapedial reflex thresholds

A

Generally between 70-90 dB

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6
Q

Term for bat ears?

And why do they occur?

A

Prominent ears

Lack of antihelical fold,
Deep conchal bowl
Protruding lobule.

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7
Q

Management of prominent ears?

A

Conservative

Surgical- pinnaplasty

If neonate - can use ear splinting

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8
Q

Complications pinnaplasty

A
  • Infection,
  • Pinna h e m a t o m a
  • Cartilage necrosis
  • Asymmetry
  • Telephone ear deformity
  • Patient dissatisfaction.
  • Keloid scarring
  • Ear canal stenosis
  • Recurrence
  • Sensory changes
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9
Q

Small deformed ear called?

Total abscence pinna called?

A

Microtia

Anotia

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10
Q

What is associated with microtia?

A

CHL (due to canal atresia) (30-60dB)

Syndromes: ChaTGP (microtia syndromes)
-CHARGE
- Pierre Robin
- Goldenhar
- Treacher Collins

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11
Q

Treatment of microtia?

A

MDT approach

Treatment of CHL usually
- Bone conduction hearing aid (BCHA), eg BCHA on a soft band trial
- then a BAHA if BCHA trial succesful

Surgical recon of pinna
Or Prosthesis

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12
Q

Embriologically how does the pinnna form?

A

From the 6 hillocks of His which are dervied from the 1st & 2nd branchial arches.

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13
Q

How does a preauricular sinus form?

A

Incomplete fusion of the hillock of His

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14
Q

Described the procedure for surgically treating a preauricular sinus?

A

Elliptical incision
dissection down to temporalis fascia and cartilage of the root of the helix, which may be resected.

Methylene blue can be helpful.

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15
Q

Syndrome associated with pre-auricular sinuses?

A

Brachio-oto-renal syndrome

Pre-auricular sinuse
Additional discharging pit in the neck, Hearing loss
Kidney dysfunction.

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16
Q

Brachio-oto-renal syndrome presents as…

A

Brachio-oto-renal syndrome

Pre-auricular sinuse
Additional discharging pit in the neck, Hearing loss
Kidney dysfunction.

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17
Q

What are the parts of a cochlear implant (and describe their functions)

A

External:

Microphone(s): pick up sound from the environment

Speech processor: selectively filters sound to prioritize audible speech

Transmitter: sends power and the processed sound signals across the skin to the internal device by radio frequency transmission

Internal:

Receiver/stimulator: receives signals from the speech processor and converts into electric impulses

Electrode array embedded in the cochlea

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18
Q

Different coloured eyes + hearing loss.

Possible diagnosis?
Name of clinical signs of different coloured eyes?
Other sympotms to look out for?

A

Waardenburg syndrome (autosomal dominant)

Group of rare genetic conditions characterised by
- Degree of congenital hearing loss
- Pigmentation deficiencies,
e.g.
— Heterochromia
— or bright blue eyes
— White forelock
— Patches of light skin

Associated with congenital nonprogres-
sive hearing loss, either unilateral (70%) or bilateral (30%).

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19
Q

Waardenburg syndrome - symptoms

A

Group of rare genetic conditions characterised by
- Degree of congenital hearing loss
- Pigmentation deficiencies,
e.g.
— Heterochromia
— or bright blue eyes
— White forelock
— Patches of light skin

Associated with congenital nonprogres-
sive hearing loss, either unilateral (70%) or bilateral (30%).

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20
Q

Enlarged vestibular aqueduct with hearing loss - diagnosis and features

A

Pendred Syndrome (autosomal recessive)
- Progressive bilateral SNHL (due to enlarged vestibualr aqueducts)
- Goitre (75%)
- Can have mild hypothyroidism

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21
Q

Pendred Syndrome - features and advide to patients

A

Bilateral worsening SNHL due to enlarged vestibular aqueduct
Goitre in 70%
Some have mild hypothyroidism

Avoid trauma as worsens

aR

“Pendred, don’t Punch a Pendred - PendRed - aR”

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22
Q

Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo
- Causes (2)
- Demographics

A
  • Most common peripheral vestibular condition
  • Usually occurs after a head injury or an URTI / ear infection
  • Predominantly affects middle aged women
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23
Q

Describe the Dix-Hallpike manoeuvre

A

Ensure no cervical spine issues / RA / Atlanto-axial instability

  • Patient positioned on bed
  • Eyes open, facing forward - asked to keep eyes open
  • Warn them it may bring on symptoms, you will look into their eyes, you will not let them fall
  • Head held between examiners hands and turned 45 degrees to the right or left
  • Patient rapidly laid backwards, head over edge of bed, 20 degree below the horizontal
  • Ask patient if this provokes symptoms, eyes observed for rotary nystagmus (generally latency of 5 seconds in BPPV, no latency if central cause)
  • If none after 30 seconds, return patient to upright position, again asked if symptoms brought on and eyes observed for nystagmus

If no symptoms, repeat on the opposite side

Provide post procedure advice
Avoid: driving, lying flat 48hrs, bending forwards, lying on affected side

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24
Q

Desciribe warnings to patient post Dix-Hallpike

A

Avoid driving,
Avoid lying flat for 48 hours
Avoid bending forwards
Avoid lying on the affected side.

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25
Q

Treatement options for Benign Paroxsymal Positional Vertigo

(or peripheral vertigo of unknown aetieology to some degree)

A

Conservative: most BPPV resolves spontaneously

Medical:
Symptomatic - Prochlorperazine
Lifestyle - reduce EToH

Vestibular rehabilitation:
Reassurance
Epley’s manouvre
Brandt Daroff exercises

Surgical:
Labyrinthectomy
Transtympanic gentamicin
Vestibular nerve section.

26
Q

Pathophysiology of BPPV

A

Loose calcium carbonate crystal (otoconia) in the posterior semicircular canal

27
Q

Epley manoeuvre

A

As with Dix

Ensure no cervical spine issues / RA / Atlanto-axial instability

  • Patient positioned on bed
  • Eyes open, facing forward - asked to keep eyes open
  • Warn them it may bring on symptoms, you will look into their eyes, you will not let them fall
  • Head held between examiners hands and turned 45 degrees to the AFFECTED side
  • Patient rapidly laid backwards, head over edge of bed, 20-30 degrees below the horizontal (may see nystagmus)
  • After 30-60s the head is turned 90 degress to the opposite side
  • After 30-60s the supported head is turned a further 90 degrees to the opposite side, achieved by the patient rolling their body in the direction they are facing
  • (Head now at 45 degrees to the horizontal)
  • After 30-60s patient sat up, head held in the fully flexed position for a final 30-60s
  • To allow otoconia out of SCC
28
Q

Bugs incolved in perichondritis?

What causes it?

Which bug is involved in a certain cause of perichondritis?

A

Staphlococcus Aureus
Pseudomonas aeruginosa - which is generally involved in piercing elated ones

Causes: Trauma , piercings

29
Q

Recurrent perichondritis, has at times affected different ears - possible Dx?

A

Relapsing polychondritis

Poorly understood autoimmune condition

Often affects multiple cartilagenous sites

Clinical Dx after bloods etc

30
Q

What is Stenger Test

A

Stenger test
Test of non-organic hearing loss
Also used to detect malingerers

31
Q

How does Stenger Test work and how’s it done?

A

If a tone of two intensities (one greater than the other) is delivered to both ears simultaneously, ONLY the ear which receives the tone of the higher intensity hears it.

Test = Can do woith audiometry or in clinic with tuning forks

In clinic - Pt blindfolded

Strike 2 tuning forks of same Hz, hold 25cm from each ear.
> Pt will only hear it in the ‘good’ ear

Then hold one 8cm from ‘bad’ ear and the other 25cm from good ear.
> Malingerer will claim they hear nothing (because all they can hear is the louder tone in the ‘bad’ ear)
> If deaf they will still hear in the good ear

32
Q

How is heareing threshold defined on pure tone audiometry?

A

Hearing threshold is defined as the softest intensity detected 50% of the time

33
Q

Contraindications to PTA? (5)

A

Too young age (under 4 years old)
No consent/Non-compliance
Occluding or excessive wax
Blood in EAM
Active infection

34
Q

What is ‘pure tone’ audiometry?

A

Pure tone = tones of a single frequency

35
Q

Thresholds for free field hearing test:

And what does the patient ned to do to pass at that threshold?

A

2/3 bi-digit numbers correct to pass:

60cm - whisper - 12dB or better
60cm - conversational - 48dB or worse
60cm - loud - 76dB or worse

15cm - whisper - 34dB or worse
15cm - conversational - 56dB or worse

36
Q

Definition of sudden SNHL:

A

SNHL of more than 30dB across three contiguous audiometric frequencies in =< 3 days

(in normal hearing ear or decrease on prev hearing loss)

37
Q

Sudden hearing loss Hx questions not to miss:

A

Associated: Vertigo / aural fullness / tinnitus / discharge

Trauma ?
Loud noise trauma?
Barotrauma: Pressure changes (diving / barotrauma / flying)

Neurological - collapse / Focal neurology / headaches / loss vision

Vertebrobasilar insufficiency - drop attacks / neck pain / TLOC, visual loss etc

Systemic diseases: MS, antiphospholipid syndrome, autoimmune disease

Travel - Lyme disease
HIV / Syphillis history

Medications - chemotherapy (cisplatin), gentamicin, loop diuretics, antimalarials, aspirin
Radiation?

38
Q

Sudden hearing loss causes:

A

Conductive:
- EAM occlusion wax, FB
- Infection
- Trauma: direct / acoustic trauma / barotrauma
- Iatrogenic

Sensorineural
- Idiopathic (many)
- Iatrogenic

  • Viral: measles, mumps
  • Infective: Lyme disease, HIV, Syphillis
  • Cerebellopontine angle tumours: Acoustic neuromas, cholesterol granulomas, meningiomas, congential dermoids, cerebellar tumours, facial schwannomas
  • ## Vascular: CVA, vertebrobasilar insufficiency
  • Temporal bone # (esp transverse)
  • Perilymph fistula - e.g. blast / barotrauma (round window rupture)
  • Ménière’s disease
  • Ototoxic drugs: Aminoglycosides, loop diuretics, cisplatin, NSAIDs, beta blockers
  • ## Radiotherapy
  • Inflammatory: MS, Antiphospholipid
39
Q

Causes of Dizzyness (broad) & Vertigo (specific)

A

Vertigo

Peripheral
- Iatrogenic - surgery
- Trauma
- BPPV
- Ménière’s disease
- Viral - labrynthitis
- Medication: Aminoglyocsides, Loop diuretics

Central
- CVA
- Migraine
- MS
- Mass lesions (Acoustic neuromas, other retrocholear or brain tumour)
- Vertebrobasilar insufficiency

Dizzyness
- CV disease / BP / Syncope
- Joint / mobility problems (imbalance)
- Neurological disease - Parkinsons
- Visiual problems
- Mental health

40
Q

Dizzyness history questions to to miss:

A

Ask about the first time they became dizzy
How long episodes (BPPV vs Meniere’s vs continous vertigo more likely central cause)
What improves, if visual fixation improves > likely peripheral
What brings on (head position, loud sounds - Tullio’s phenomenon = superior canal dehiscence)

Aural fullness…. Menieres
Hearing loss
Migrain symptoms

Recent viral illness - labrynthitis

Joint / mobility e.g. proprioceptive imbalance
TRAUMA!
SURGERY

Drugs - aminoglycosides, antihypertensives (postural symptoms..)

FH - Menieres?

Stress - worsen symptoms?
Impact on life
ARE THEY DRIVING - Advice - DVLA

41
Q

Pro’s and Con’s of ventilation ducts on hearing aids

A
  • to allow sound in ear canal to escape,
  • reduces sense of pressure in ear,
  • Reduces occlusion effect so users voice sounds more natural to them
  • Reduces low frequencies therefore giving relative boost to high frequencies
  • Does increase chance of feedback / whistling though
42
Q

Treatment options for single dead ear

A

CROS - Contralateral routing of signal
BiCROS - Bilateral microphones with the contralateral routing of signal
Bone conduction e.g. BAHA
Cochlear implant

43
Q

How to conduct audiogram

A
  • Inspect EAM, ensure clear
  • Ensure no contraindications
  • Start with better hearing ear, AC 1000HZ at 60dB
  • Reduce by 10dB until no response
  • Then increase in increments of 5dB until response
44
Q

What is Tullio’s phenomenom?

A

Noise induced vertigo - possible superior semicircular canal dehiscence

45
Q

What is Hennebert’s sign

A

‘Pressure induced nystagmus’ directed in the plane of the dehisced canal

= nystagmus induced by pressure changes in the external auditory canal

= a positive fistula test

= possible superior semicircular canal dehiscence

46
Q

What type of CT is best for investigating cholesteatoma?

A

CT of the petrous temporal bones

47
Q

Haemotympanum - causes

A

Trauma - +/- temporal bone #
Nasal packing
Epistaxis
Coagulopathy
Barotrauma
Chronic otitis media

Glomus tympanicum or Jugulare

48
Q

Treatment of otitis media with effusion (glue ear) in children:

What patient factor alters this algorythm?

A
  • 1st line: Watch and wait for 3 months
  • Then: Grommets
  • If grommts contridnicated / not wanted: Hearing aid

Down’s syndrome or Cleft palate:
* 1st line: Watch and wait for 3 months
* Then: HEARING AIDs 1st
* Then: Grommets

In cleft grommets should be out in at time of closure of cleft

49
Q

Treatment of OME (glue ear) in Down’s syndrome

A
  • Watch and wait 3/12
  • Then hearing aids
  • Last try grommets
50
Q

Where should the incision be made for a mastoidectomy in a child (what age?) and why?

A

The postauricaulr incision should be made more posterior, directed away from the mastoid tip in children under 3.

Mastoid tip which usually protects the facial nerve may not be fully developed.

51
Q

After postauricular incision for mastoidectomy what is the next step?

A

Raise tympanomeatul flap

52
Q

Hearing loss on transverse vs longitudinal temporal boine fractures and why

A

CHL = longitudinal , ossicles disrupted

SHL = Transverse, Otic capsule (boney labrynth) more likely involved

53
Q

What do CROS and BiCROS aids do?

When are they used?

A

Contralateral Routing of Signals/Sound
Bi-Contralateral Routing of Signals

= 2 aids
- Transmitter on the worse hearing ear
- Hearing aid for the bette hearing ear which plays the transmission from the worse hearing ear (or amplifies if BiCROS)

Both are for ASYMMETRICAL hearing loss where one ear cannot hear speech (insuficient speech discrimination) / or one ear is dead

**CROS **
* = for where one ear dead / no speech discrim and the other ear hears normally.

  • So sound is just routed to the contralteral ear

BiCROS
* = for where one ear dead / no speech discrim PLUS the better hearing ear is also hearing impaired

  • SO sound is routed to the better ear AND amplified
54
Q

How to detect children who are faking / malingering hearing loss

A

Auditory brainstem response testing
Cortical evoked response audiometry

55
Q

Behind the ear (air conduction) hearing aids

Used in what types of HL?
- Advs (3)
- Disadvs (3)

A

Useful in ALL types HL

Advs:
- Easy to use
- Available on the NHS
- Suitable for all hearing impairmeny

Disadvs:
- Cosmetic (highly visible)
- Cannot be used in chronic ottorhoea / canal stenois s / microtia
- Some uisers do not tolerate

For the small in the ear canal ones dexterity is probably main disadvantage

56
Q

Bone conduction hearing aids on headband

  • Indications
  • Advs (1)
  • Disadvs (3)
A

Indications:
* single sided deafess
* Conventional hearing aids not tolerated or contrindicated (see below)

Advs:
- Useful if conventional hearing aids not tolerated or not suitable e.g. microtia /chronic ottorhoea / canal stenosis

Disadvs:
* Poor sound quality
* Cosemtically unappealing
* Pressue effects in children
* Unnatural listening experience

57
Q

Bone anchored hearing aids

Indications

  • Advs (3)
  • Disadvs (1)
A

Indications:
* single sided deafness
* Conventional hearing aids not tolerated or contrindicated (see below)

Advs:
- Useful if conventional hearing aids not tolerated or not suitable e.g. microtia /chronic ottorhoea / canal stenosis
- Better sound quality
- Cosmetically better than on band

Disadvs:
- Requires siurgical procedure

58
Q

CROS / BiCROS
Indications

  • Advs (1)
  • Disadvs (2)
A

Indications:
* Unilatral (CROS) or Asymmetrical (BiCROS) hearing loss

Advs:
- Useful for unilater or asymmetrical hearing loss

Disadvs:
- Requires two hearign aids
- Not everyone finds benefit

59
Q

Risks of BAHA / bone acnhored hearing aid insertion

A
  • Failure to attach / to ossiointegrate
  • Bleeding from dural sinus
  • Numbness of the area
  • Wound Infection
  • Keloid scarring
  • CSF leak
  • Meningitis
60
Q

Body worn hearing aid = Box with earphones

Indications

  • Advs (2)
  • Disadvs (3)
A

Indications:
* Any type of HL, good for severe SNHL

Advs:
- Powerful amplification for profound SNHL
- Larger controls if dexterity an issue

Disadvs:
- Bulky
- Picks up rustling from clothing
- Cosmetic / carrying box about

61
Q

Reasons hearing aids whistle (3)

A
  • Microphone too close to speaker
  • Ear blocked with wax
  • Ventilation duct too big