Clinical Article Frequency specific hearing improvement in microvascular decompression of the cochlear nerve
نویسندگان
چکیده
Background. Microvascular compressions of the cochlear nerve can lead to hearing loss. Due to the tonotopic organization of the cochlear nerve any focal compression of the cochlear nerve will result in a frequency specific hearing loss. Decompressing the cochlear nerve could result in a frequency specific hearing improvement, without improving overall hearing. Method. Thirty one patients underwent microvascular decompression operations of the vestibulocochlear nerve for vertigo or tinnitus. Preoperative audiograms were substracted from postoperative audiograms obtained 2 years after microvascular decompression. The frequencies of maximal hearing improvement postoperatively were determined. Findings. Of the 31 patients studied, 19 had improvements of 5 dB or more at one or more frequencies postoperatively, and 15 patients had improvements of 10 dB or more. Three patients had improvements of 25 dB or more postoperatively. The postoperative hearing improvement was frequency-specific and related to the anatomical location of the vascular contact on the auditory nerve. The improvement of hearing becomes diluted when the difference between preand postoperative hearing thresholds are averaged over all audiometric frequencies. We therefore present results for each frequency that was tested. Conclusions. Microvascular decompression of the cochlear nerve can improve hearing in selected patients. The improvement seems too small to justify decompressive surgery for the sole purpose of hearing improvement, but it could be considered if associated short vertigo spells, ipsilateral tinnitus, otalgia and cryptogenic hemifacial spasm are present. Decompression should be performed early, before BAEP changes become noticeable. 3D-MRI could become a valuable tool for selecting good surgical candidates.
منابع مشابه
Microvascular decompression for tinnitus: significant improvement for tinnitus intensity without improvement for distress. A 4-year limit.
OBJECTIVE Microvascular compressions of the cochlear nerve can lead to tinnitus. The tinnitus initially is related to nonsynchronous signal transmission in the auditory nerve, neurophysiologically characterized by a peak II amplitude decrease. Chronic compression can lead to a focal demyelination, resulting in an increase in Iinterpeak latency I-III with tinnitus and frequency-specific hearing ...
متن کاملHEMIFACIAL SPASM: A RERORT OF 100 CASES TREATED BY MICROVASCULAR DECOMPRESSION
100 patients with hemifacial spasm treated by microvascular decompression are presented. There were 60 females and 40 males. Their ages ranged from 29 to 75 years with a median age of 54 years, and the left side was involved predominantly. The common focal signs were facial nerve palsy in 41 cases, diminished hearing in 14 cases, trigeminal neuralgia in 11 cases, and homolateral trigeminal...
متن کاملThe effect of cochlear implantation on the improvement of hearing performance in children suffering from profound hereditary and Non-hereditary hearing loss
Introduction: Hearing is one of the dominant senses of humans. In fact, human beings learn the language which is spoken in their environment and, then, develop the capability to speak. Cochlear implantation is introduced worldwide as a method for the treatment of the severe-to-profound sensory-neural hearing loss. Therefore, the present study aims to investigate the effect of cochlear implantat...
متن کاملTHE PIVOTAL ROLE OF CRANIAL NERVER DECOMPRESSION
Reported are a total of 81 microsurgical operations for cranial nerve root decompression comprising of 66 trigeminal, 10 facial, one vestibular, one vagus and three accessory nerve dysfunction syndromes from 1983 to 1990. Almost all cases of trigeminal neuralgia (TNG) secondary to vascular (59 cases) and minute mass (10 cases) compression, and those with hemifacial spasm (HFS) (nine out o...
متن کاملA 46-Year-Old Woman with Unilateral Hearing Loss: A Recent Diagnosis of a Birth Condition
Cochlear nerve (CN) aplasia refers to the absence of a visible CN on oblique sagittal magnetic resonance images of the lateral aspect of the inner auditory canal (IAC). Magnetic resonance (MR) is the preferred technique in patients with sensorineural hearing loss and/or vertigo; however, computed tomography (CT) is used to evaluate the IAC or facial nerve canal. Three types of aplasia or hypopl...
متن کامل