Fluctuating and/or progressive sensorineural hearing loss in children
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Laryngoscope
- Vol. 104 (8), 958-964
- https://doi.org/10.1288/00005537-199408000-00009
Abstract
Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) which is sudden in onset, fluctuating, and/or progressive complicates medical management, hearing aid selection, and individualized educational planning for a hearing-impaired child. In spite of multidisciplinary evaluation and intervention, a gradual decrease in auditory acuity may continue unabated in a significant number of cases. Intercurrent middle ear disease and inconsistent audiologic technique can account for threshold variation in some cases. The study population consisted of 229 children (132 boys; 97 girls) aged 1 to 19.9 years at first audiogram which revealed at least a mild degree of sensorineural hearing loss in one or both ears (35 unilateral), and who demonstrated threshold variation of 10 dB or more in at least one ear at one or more of the standard audiometric test frequencies (250, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000, and 8000 Hz) and were without concurrent middle ear disease (mean length of follow-up, 4.9 years; mean number of audiograms, 10.3). Of 365 ears demonstrating threshold variation of 10 dB or more, 22 (6%) had purely progressive losses without intercurrent upward fluctuation, 208 (57%) had fluctuating thresholds with gradually progressive losses, and 135 (37%) had intermittent threshold fluctuation without permanent deterioration. The probability of contralateral threshold fluctuation if one ear fluctuated was 0.91, while the probability of contralateral progressive SNHL if one ear progressed was 0.67. Demographic data, presumptive etiology, degree of initial SNHL, audiometric configuration, and symmetry of threshold variation were considered as potential predictors of the likelihood of threshold fluctuation and/or progression.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Middle ear disease in young children with sensorineural hearing lossThe Laryngoscope, 1993
- Severe versus profound sensorineural hearing loss in children: Implications for cochlear implantationThe Laryngoscope, 1990
- Hyperlipidemia in association with childhood sensorineural hearing lossThe Laryngoscope, 1988
- Two emerging perilymph fistula “syndromes” in childrenThe Laryngoscope, 1986
- Perilymph fistula: The iowa experienceThe Laryngoscope, 1986
- Congenital Cytomegalovirus InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- Round window membrane rupture and acquired sensorineural hearing loss in childrenClinical Otolaryngology, 1980
- Hyperlipoproteinemias in the etiology of inner ear diseaseThe Laryngoscope, 1973
- The Pathology of Rubella DeafnessInternational Audiology, 1970
- Meningitis and deafness: The problem, its physical, audiological, psychological, and educational manifestations in deaf childrenThe Laryngoscope, 1967