Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Audiological tests were conducted on 34 patients before and after undergoing an operation under spinal anesthesia. One of these patients developed a considerable unilateral hearing loss in the low-frequency range, which persisted until an epidural blood-patch was given. Unexpectedly, we also found a general small significant threshold shift at 500 Hz, which has never before been described in the literature. The biological mechanism is discussed and the results suggest that the explanation of the hearing loss could be an endolymphatic hydrops resulting from perilymphatic hypotonia due to loss of liquor, during and after the spinal anesthesia.
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PMID:Low-frequency hearing loss after spinal anesthesia. Perilymphatic hypotonia? 184 92

In a prospective study of 12 patients undergoing operation for acoustic neuromas the hearing on the contralateral ear was tested before and systematically day by day after operation. In 11 cases a perceptive loss of at least 20 dB was found at one or more frequencies during the first 2 postoperative weeks. A maximal average threshold decrease of 16.5 dB was found in the treble (2.4, 8 kHz average), while a tendency of a more pronounced decrease of 19.6 dB was seen in the low frequencies (125, 250, 500 Hz average). After 3 months the hearing had normalized in all cases. The explanation for the transitional loss supports the present theory: The loss of cerebro-spinal fluid during operation diminishes the CSF pressure. This decrease is transmitted to the perilymph via the cochlear aqueduct producing a transitory perilymphatic hypotonia, which in turn hydromechanically results in a relative endolymphatic hypertension mimicking an endolymphatic hydrops thus representing a human hydrops model.
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PMID:Hearing decrease after loss of cerebrospinal fluid. A new hydrops model? 188 72

In a prospective study of 12 patients undergoing operation for acoustic neuromas, the hearing on the contralateral ear was tested before and systematically after operation. In 11 cases a perceptive loss of at least 20 dB was found at one or more frequencies during the first two postoperative weeks. The maximal average threshold decrease was 16.5 dB in the treble and 19.6 in the low frequencies. After three months the hearing had normalized in all cases. The loss of cerebrospinal fluid during operation diminishes the CSF pressure, which is then transmitted to the perilymph via the cochlear aqueduct, producing a transitory perilymphatic hypotonia and a relative endolymphatic hypertension mimicking an endolymphatic hydrops.
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PMID:[Reversible hearing loss in the contralateral ear after surgery of acoustic neurinoma]. 825 8