(Redirected from Sensorineural)
'Sensorineural hearing loss' is a type of
hearing loss in which the root cause lies in the
vestibulocochlear nerve (
Cranial nerve VIII), the inner
ear, or central processing centers of the
brain.
The
Weber test, in which a tuning fork is touched to the head, localizes to the normal
ear in people with this condition.
The
Rinne test, which tests air conduction ''vs.'' bone conduction is positive (normal), though both bone and air conduction are reduced equally.
Differential diagnosis
Sensorineural hearing loss may be
congenital or acquired.
Congenital
★ Lack of development (
aplasia) of the
cochlea
★
Chromosomal syndromes (rare)
★ Congenital
cholesteatoma -
squamous epithelium is normally present on either side of the tympanic membrane. Externally, within the
external auditory meatus or
ear canal and internally within the
middle ear. Within the middle ear the simple epithelium gradually transitions into ciliated pseudostratified epithelium lining the
Eustachian tube now known as the
pharyngotympanic tube becoming continuous with the
respiratory epithelium in the pharynx. The squamous epithelium hyperplasia within the middle ear behaves like an invasive
tumour and destroys middle ear structures if not removed
★ Delayed familial progressive
Acquired
★
Inflammatory
★
★
Suppurative labyrinthitis
★
★
Meningitis
★
★
Mumps
★
★
Measles
★
★
Viral
★
★
Syphilis
★
Ototoxic drugs
★
★
Aminoglycosides (most common cause; ''e.g.'',
tobramycin)
★
★
Loop diuretics (''e.g.'',
Furosemide)
★
★
Antimetabolites (''e.g.'',
Methotrexate)
★
★
Salicylates (''e.g.'',
Aspirin)
★
Physical trauma - either due to a
fracture of the
temporal bone affecting the
cochlea and
middle ear, or a
shearing injury affecting
cranial nerve VIII.
★ Noise-induced - prolonged exposure to loud noises (>90
dB) causes hearing loss which begins at 4000Hz (high frequency). The normal hearing range is from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz.
★
Presbyacusis - age-related hearing loss that occurs in the high frequency range (4000Hz to 8000Hz).
★ Sudden hearing loss
★
★
Idiopathic (ISSHL: idiopathic sudden sensoneurinal hearing loss),
H91.2, German Wikipedia: "
Hörsturz"
★
★ Vascular
ischemia of the
inner ear or CN 8
★
★ Perilymph
fistula, usually due to a rupture of the
round or
oval windows and the leakage of
perilymph. The patient will most likely also experience
vertigo or
imbalance. A history of an event that increased
intracranial pressure or caused trauma is usually present).
★
Autoimmune - a prompt injection of
steroids into ear is necessary.
★ Cerebellopontine angle tumour (junction of the
pons and
cerebellum) (the cerebellopontine angle is the exit site of both CN7 and CN8. Patients with these tumours often have signs and symptoms corresponding to compression of both nerves)
★
★ ''
Acoustic neuroma (Vestibular schwannoma)'' - this is a
schwannoma (benign neoplasm of
Schwann cells)
★
★
Meningioma - benign tumour of the
pia and
arachnoid maters
★
Meniere's disease - causes sensorineural hearing loss in the low frequency range (125 Hz to 1000 Hz). Meniere's disesase is characterized by sudden attacks of vertigo lasting minutes to hours preceded by
tinnitus, aural fullness, and fluctuating hearing loss.
''Table 1''. A table comparing sensorineural to
conductive hearing loss
| '''Criteria''' | '''Sensorineural hearing loss''' | '''Conductive hearing loss''' |
| 'Anatomical Site' | Inner ear, cranial nerve VIII, or central processing centers | Middle ear (ossicular chain), tympanic membrane, or external ear |
| 'Weber Test' | Sound localizes to normal ear | Sound localizes to affected ear (ear with conductive loss) |
| 'Rinne Test' | Positive Rinne; Air conduction > Bone conduction (both air and bone conduction are decreased equally, but the difference between them is unchanged). | Negative Rinne; Bone Conduction > Air Conduction (Bone/Air Gap) |
Treatment
At present, sensorineural hearing loss is treated with
hearing aids, which amplify sounds at pre-set frequencies to overcome a sensorineural hearing loss in that range; or
cochlear implants, which stimulate the
cochlear nerve directly.
External References
★
Sensorineural Hearing Loss, Dr Peter Grant