J Korean Bal Soc.  2003 Jun;2(1):103-106.

Hearing Recovery in Patients of Sudden Hearing Loss with Vertigo ; Incheon

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Gil Medical Center, Gachon Medical School, Incheon, Korea. Han@ghil.com
  • 2Department of Otorhinolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery,Inha University, College of Medicine, Incheon, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: In the past studies, it was reported that vertigo was accompanied by sudden deafness patients from 25% to 47% and it increased to 56% when electronystagmography was used. They also reported that when sudden deafness patients showed vertigo symptom. The initial hearing losses were severe and their prognoses were poor. But they divided the sudden deafness patients simply by whether vertigo existed, not considering the extent of hearing loss. So we compared the prognosis between the sudden deafness patients showing the same level of hearing loss. MATERIALS AND METHOD: We sampled 157 sudden deafness patients (Feb 1999 - Mar 2002). Of these, 17 patients with acute vertigo (group A) and 17 control patients without vertigo (group B) having the same level of mean air conduction as group A were selected.
RESULTS
Group A showed frequent flat form of audiogram, poor response to treatment regardless of the age than group B.
CONCLUSION
In sudden deafness patients, objectively proven acute vertigo symptom is a prognostic factor of hearing recovery.


MeSH Terms

Electronystagmography
Hearing Loss
Hearing Loss, Sudden*
Hearing*
Humans
Incheon*
Prognosis
Vertigo*
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