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LOW FREQUENCY AIR‐BONE GAP IN MENIERE'S DISEASE WITHOUT MIDDLE EAR PATHOLOGYA Preliminary Report

 

作者: Chava Muchnik,   Minka Hildesheimer,   Moshe Rubinstein,   I. Arenberg,  

 

期刊: The American Journal of Otology  (OVID Available online 1989)
卷期: Volume 10, issue 1  

页码: 1-4

 

ISSN:0192-9763

 

年代: 1989

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

The audiograms of some patients suffering from Meniere's disease show an unexplained conductive component, or air-bone gap (ABC), predominantly in the low frequencies. Neither the history nor physical findings support poor eustachian tube function, ossicular chain abnormalities, chronic ear disease, physical trauma, or otosclerosis as a cause of this audiometric finding. In the present study, 40 patients diagnosed as suffering from classical Meniere's disease were evaluated audiometri-cally. Thirteen (32.5%) of these patients demonstrated a low frequency ABC. An otologic evaluation was performed on each patient who exhibited the abnormal finding, but no middle ear pathology was discovered. An otherwise unexplained low frequency ABC in patients with Meniere's disease suggests the possibility of an “inner ear” conductive hearing loss. This conductive component may result from endolymphatic hydrops or perilymphatic hypertension (i.e., an inner ear hyperpressure exerted against the medial surface of the stapedial footplate) rather than from middle ear pathology. “Inner ear” conductive hearing loss is thought to be caused by an increase in inner ear fluid volume (endolymphatic hydrops) and pressure (endolymphatic or perilymphatic hypertension), which dampens footplate mobility medially and which is directly related to a relative inner ear or labyrinthine hyperpressure. Since the footplate mobility is only dampened and not fixed, a stapedial reflex may still be elicited.

 

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