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Acta Oto-Laryngologica 2014-Jan

Clinical features of rapidly progressive bilateral sensorineural hearing loss.

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Ippei Kishimoto
Hiroshi Yamazaki
Yasushi Naito
Shogo Shinohara
Keizo Fujiwara
Masahiro Kikuchi
Yuji Kanazawa
Risa Tona
Hiroyuki Harada

Keywords

Abstract

CONCLUSIONS

Rapidly progressive bilateral sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) often develops as a symptom of intracranial diseases or systemic vasculitis. For early diagnosis and treatment of these potentially fatal diseases, a history of hearing deterioration within 2 months and associated symptoms may be important.

OBJECTIVE

To reveal clinical features and causative diseases for rapidly progressive bilateral SNHL.

METHODS

The inclusion criterion was patients with bilateral progressive SNHL, who had experienced difficulty in daily conversation within 4 days to 1 year after the onset of hearing loss awareness. This study was a retrospective evaluation of 12 patients with rapidly progressive bilateral SNHL who visited our hospital between 2007 and 2011.

RESULTS

The causative disease for hearing loss was identified in 11 of 12 patients; intracranial lesions including nonbacterial meningitis, meningeal metastasis of lymphoma, and superficial siderosis in 4 patients, systemic vasculitis in 2, auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder in 1, and an isolated inner ear disorder in 4. Relatively rapid hearing deterioration within 2 months showed a significant association in six patients with an intracranial lesion or systemic vasculitis. Moreover, all these six patients complained of dizziness and/or non-cochleovestibular symptoms such as fever, headache, and/or altered mental state in addition to hearing loss.

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