Tinnitus/Uticartia/Etc Flashcards
Barotrauma treatment
avoidance, oral or nasal decongestants, swallowing, valsalva, chewing gum
If rupture of TM, how to tx?
time/patience
Perilymphatic fistula treatment
ENT
Acoustic neuroma
vestibular schwannoma
Schwann cell tumors arise from
vestibular portion of CN VIII
Schwann cell tumors are
slow growing
What percent of intracranial tumors are schwann cell tumors
8%
Classic presentation of acoustic neuroma
classic presentation is unilateral sensorineural healing loss and tinnitus
In acoustic neuroma, you may or may not have
gait disturbance or other CN involvement
Diagnosis of acoustic neuroma
hearing test, mRI or CT (if need to avoid MRI)
Tx of acoustic neuroma
surgery, radiation, observation
Tinnitus definition
perception of sound in one or both ears
can be buzzing, ringing, hissing, continuous or intermittent, pulsatile or non-pulsatile
How many people in the US are affected by chronic tinnitis?
50 million
Pulsatile tinnitus is most commonly _____ in etiology.
Vascular (aneurysm)
Other causes of pulsatile tinnitus:
auditory
Tinnitus dx
history, physical - auscultate for bruits in patients, if pulsatile - refer to ENT
Tx goal of tinnitus
make them less aware of it: biofeedback, stress reduction, CBT, benzos, masking devices - white noise
What is barotrauma?
pain/trauma to ear related to pressure differences - flying/diving
Tinnitus is associated with
depression/anxiety
Allergic rhinitis
seasonal, perennial, “hay fever”
can happen all year round if dust, etc.
Vasomotor
perennial - non-allergic
happens all year round
Onset of allergic rhinitis
onset typically before 30, peak incidence in childhood/adolescence
Pathophysiology of allergic rhinitis: type of antibodies
response to allergen exposure by production of IgE antibodies
In allergic rhinitis: IgE binds to
mast cells, basophils