Search results for " hearing loss"

showing 5 items of 105 documents

Akustikusneurinom als Ursache einer progredienten kindlichen Hörstörung

2003

Background: Neurinomas of the vestibulocochlear nerve unrelated to neurofibromatosis in children are extremely rare. Only 20 cases in children under the age of 16 are reported in the literature. Progressive unilateral hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo and neurological deficits due to cranial nerve or brainstem compression are clinical signs. Patient and Results: We report on the case of a 12-years-old girl with an unilateral hearing loss, progressing to total deafness. Otoacoustic emissions were normal. In the MRI a large cerebellopontine angle tumor was found, identified as schwannoma of the vestibulocochlear nerve. Conclusions: The importance of MR Imaging in children with progressive unila…

medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryHearing lossAudiologySchwannomamedicine.diseaseCerebellopontine angleVestibulocochlear nerveOtorhinolaryngologyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesMedicineCranial nerve diseasemedicine.symptomUnilateral hearing lossAudiometrybusinessTinnitusLaryngo-Rhino-Otologie
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Newborn hearing-screening project using transient evoked otoacoustic emissions: western sicily experience

2006

Summary Objective To study the incidence of congenital sensorineural hearing loss in all newborns introducing a screen test with a protocol no expensive, with a good “screen sensitivity” that could let an earlier identification of hearing impairment beginning early intervention by 2 months of age and increasing the probability of having language development within the normal range of development. Methods The study was conducted in Sciacca hospital from the beginning of 2003 to our days and was carried out with transient evoked otoacoustic emission using the criteria for PASS or RETEST and considering eventual prenatal and perinatal risk factors. All the newborns were divided into four group…

medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentHearing Loss SensorineuralOtoacoustic Emissions SpontaneousOtoacoustic emissionNewborn Hearing screeningAudiologyScreen testHearing screeningConsanguinityNeonatal Screeningotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineHumansNormal rangeRehabilitationbusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)Hearing TestsIncidenceInfant NewbornGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseSettore MED/32 - AudiologiaSettore MED/31 - OtorinolaringoiatriaOtorhinolaryngologySpeech developmentItalyPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthSensorineural hearing lossbusiness
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Exposure to ototoxic agents and hearing loss: A review of current knowledge

2014

Several experimental and clinical studies have shown that a variety of ototoxic agents (such as drugs, industrial chemicals and noise) can cause sensorineural hearing loss. The most common ototoxic drugs used in clinical practice include: aminoglycoside and macrolide antibiotics, quinoline anti-malarials, platinum analog antineoplastics, loop diuretics, and acetylsalicylic acid. Among chemical agents with potential ototoxic properties are: organic solvents, heavy metals, organotins, nitriles, asphyxiants, and pesticides/herbicides. Acoustic exposure to high intensity and/or prolonged noise can also cause permanent threshold shifts in auditory perception. Ototoxic agents can influence audito…

medicine.medical_specialtypharmacological injuryEndolymphHearing lossototoxicity hearing loss pharmacological injury reactive oxygen speciesPharmacologyAudiologyProinflammatory cytokineSpeech and HearingAtrophyOtotoxicitymedicinehearing lossreactive oxygen specieschemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesbusiness.industrySettore MED/44 - Medicina Del LavoroAminoglycosidemedicine.diseaseototoxicity; hearing loss; pharmacological injury; reactive oxygen speciesSettore MED/32 - AudiologiaototoxicitySettore MED/31 - Otorinolaringoiatriamedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologychemistrySettore BIO/14 - FarmacologiaSensorineural hearing lossmedicine.symptombusinessHearing, Balance and Communication
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Hearing loss in facioscapulohumeral dystrophy.

1986

Bilateral sloping high frequency hearing loss of 20–90 dB was found in six out of ten patients with infantile or adolescent onset FSHD. In all cases the basic defect could be traced to the cochlea. The outer hair cells of the basal turn are predominantly affected. In 20 patients with various other forms of muscular dystrophy or neuromuscular disorders with an FSH distribution, no sensorineural hearing loss was found. Myopathology of FSHD patients extended from mild to severe, often showing inflammatory infiltrates and type I fibre atrophy, without unequivocal differences between the two groups with and without hearing loss. It is concluded that cochlear dysfunction is a specific and frequen…

musculoskeletal diseasesmedicine.medical_specialtyShoulderAdolescentHearing lossBiopsyFacial MusclesAudiologyMuscular DystrophiesBasal (phylogenetics)Atrophyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesMedicineHumansMuscular dystrophyChildHearing LossHearing Loss High-FrequencyCochleaEarly onsetRetrospective Studiesbusiness.industryHearing TestsMusclesDystrophySyndromemedicine.diseaseMuscular AtrophyPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthSensorineural hearing lossmedicine.symptombusinessEuropean journal of pediatrics
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Speech intelligibility and perception after cochlear implant in deaf children with or without associated disabilities: A review

2014

The ability to make oneself understood is critical to most human interaction, and as such, the failure to develop fully intelligible speech may result in a significant handicap especially in the child in learning phase. World literature has demonstrated improved speech intelligibility and speech perception as well as a good development of communication skills in prelingual profound sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) children after cochlear implantation. The literature considered as universally-accepted the usefulness/effectiveness of unilateral early cochlear implantation in severely-profoundly deaf children with or without associated disabilities. In fact this procedure, for children implan…

sensorineural hearing loss cochlear implantSettore MED/31 - OtorinolaringoiatriaSettore MED/32 - Audiologia
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