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Query: UMLS:C0042571 (
vertigo
)
7,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Auditory symptoms (
hyperacusis
, tinnitus, decreased hearing) have long been recognized to accompany herpetic or idiopathic facial paralysis. Twenty-nine percent of 1,080 patients with idiopathic facial paralysis and 37 percent of 172 with herpes zoster oticus facial paralysis had auditory symptoms. Abnormal related sensori-neural hearing loss was documented in only 11 of these 377 patients with auditory complaints. All of the 11 had a diagnosis of herpes zoster oticus. Sensori-neural hearing loss occurs in only about 6.5 percent of patients with herpes zoster facial paralysis, and no confirmed case of such loss in idiopathic facial paralysis has been reported. In patients presenting with sensori-neural hearing loss accompanying facial paralysis believed to be idiopathic, herpes zoster should be suspected even in the absence of vesicles. Factors favorable for recovery of auditory function include age 64 years or younger, mild initial hearing loss, a cochlear pattern of hearing loss, and absence of
vertigo
. Recovery of auditory function does take place; however, a high-tone sensori-neural loss may persist except in younger patients.
...
PMID:Auditory symptoms associated with herpes zoster or idiopathic facial paralysis. 55 56
Forty-two patients with disabling tinnitus and reported symptoms of craniomandibular disorders (CMD) were investigated by means of questionnaire, semistructured interview, stomatognathic examination and 2-week diary with thrice-daily ratings of tinnitus and mood. The findings have been analysed in order to identify symptoms of CMD related to tinnitus, and it was concluded that awareness of diurnal bruxism and feeling of jaw tenderness/fatigue may be related to fluctuating tinnitus,
vertigo
and
hyperacusis
.
...
PMID:A stomatognathic analysis of patients with disabling tinnitus and craniomandibular disorders (CMD). 205 46
Ramsay Hunt syndrome is known to cause audiological signs and symptoms, including sudden, unexpected hearing loss. We carried out a retrospective review of the audiological manifestations of 186 patients with Ramsay Hunt syndrome, measuring their hearing loss patterns,
hyperacusis
, tinnitus, herpetic rash, facial paralysis, pain and
vertigo
. Statistical correlations of these parameters were equated with prognosis. Prognosis for eventual hearing recovery is, in general, excellent. Prognostic indicators of poor hearing recovery include advanced age, retrocochlear hearing loss, male gender,
vertigo
, and speech frequency hearing loss.
...
PMID:Audiological manifestations of Ramsay Hunt syndrome. 232 14
Middle fossa vestibular neurectomy is especially useful for treatment of Meniere's disease. We treated 59 cases of Meniere's disease with this technique and followed them up for at least ten years. Middle fossa vestibular neurectomy was effective against
vertigo
in Meniere's disease in 100% of the cases with unilateral involvement. Hearing, as well as tinnitus and
hyperacusis
, showed a clearly favorable evolution after vestibular neurectomy. The excellent long-term effects of this procedure on
vertigo
and low incidence of complications make middle fossa vestibular neurectomy one of the most effective surgical treatments for Meniere's disease.
...
PMID:Middle fossa vestibular neurectomy. Long-term results. 650 26
A prospective neuro-otological study concerning 30 cases of fibrositis syndrome (psychogenic rheumatism, PR) and 30 age-matched normal controls was made and a retrospective study concerning 33 cases of Meniere's disease (MD) diagnosed and followed-up, examined between 1965 and 1982. Results showed: sensorineural hearing loss at low frequencies in all early stages of MD and in 10/30 of PR;
hyperacusis
(pain threshold below 100 dBHL bilaterally for all frequencies) without other sign of recruitment in 73.3% of PR and in 3/4 cases of MD where it was measured (discomfort or
vertigo
due to noise was noted retrospectively in 16/33 of early stages of MD); hyperreactivity of per-rotatory nystagmus in 53.3% of PR without neurological or peripheral vestibular lesions and, with or without vestibular unilateral lesions, in 39.9% of MD. None of the controls showed
hyperacusis
, hyperreactivity of per-rotatory nystagmus or deafness at low frequencies.
...
PMID:Meniere's disease and fibrositis syndrome (psychogenic rheumatism). Relationship in audiometric and nystagmographic results. 659 16
Neurovascular cross-compression of the root entry zone of the Vth, VIIth and IXth cranial nerves causes symptoms of trigeminal neuralgia, hemifacial spasm and glossopharyngeal neuralgia. It is reasonable to search for a group of patients presenting with typical paroxysmal vestibular and/or cochlear symptoms, analogously caused by neurovascular compression of the VIIIth cranial nerve. Since no pathognomonic sign or test has yet been established, the diagnosis of 'vestibular paroxysmia' secondary to neurovascular cross-compression is based on four characteristic features: (1) short attacks of rotational to-and-fro
vertigo
lasting seconds to minutes; (2) attacks frequently dependent on particular head positions and modification of the duration of the attack by changing head position ('disabling positional
vertigo
'); (3)
hyperacusis
or tinnitus permanently or during the attack; and (4) measurable auditory or vestibular deficits by neurophysiological methods. Carbamazepine is a most effective drug. In medically intractable cases, retromastoid craniotomy and microvascular decompression is a recommended procedure once the side of disorder has been identified.
...
PMID:VIIIth nerve vascular compression syndrome: vestibular paroxysmia. 787 9
Otological complications of varicella-zoster virus (Ramsay Hunt syndrome) include facial paralysis, tinnitus, hearing loss,
hyperacusis
(dysacousis),
vertigo
, dysgeusia, and decreased tearing. Cranial nerves V, IX, and X are often affected. Gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging demonstrates enhancement of the geniculate ganglion and facial nerve. These manifestations are identical to Bell's palsy but are more severe and carry a graver prognosis. Eight percent of Bell's palsy patients eventually are diagnosed as "zoster sine herpete." A new case of Ramsay Hunt syndrome will occur every 52 minutes, compared to every 10 minutes for a new case of Bell's palsy.
...
PMID:Otological complications of herpes zoster. 818 2
Associations between tinnitus and craniomandibular disorders (CMD) were investigated in an epidemiological sample, in tinnitus patients, and in patients attending a 'CMD-clinic'. Natural course of tinnitus was explored in a longitudinal epidemiological study of an elderly population. Several findings indicating a relatively strong relationship between CMD, tinnitus and subjective hearing loss were noted. This relationship seemed to be independent of objectively assessed degree of hearing loss, occupational noise exposure, general morbidity, medication or socioeconomic status. The prevalence of frequent headaches and fatigue or tenderness in jaw muscles was higher in tinnitus patients than would be expected if these conditions were unrelated. About one third of the individuals affected by tinnitus reported influence on tinnitus by jaw movements or pressure on the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). Diurnal bruxism and jaw fatigue appeared to be related to fluctuating tinnitus,
vertigo
, and
hyperacusis
. Stomatognathic and biofeedback treatment seemed to be able to reduce or eliminate tinnitus in some patients. Relatively low severity of tinnitus, normal hearing, fluctuating tinnitus, and some signs and symptoms of CMD are believed to constitute predictors of successful treatment outcome. Substantial longitudinal fluctuations with a high occurrence of spontaneous remissions of tinnitus were found in elderly people.
...
PMID:Tinnitus and craniomandibular disorders--is there a link? 850 98
Patients with superior canal dehiscence (SCD) syndrome experience
vertigo
and oscillopsia in response to loud sounds and to stimuli that result in changes in middle ear or intracranial pressure. They may also experience
hyperacusis
to bone-conducted sounds. The evoked eye movements in this syndrome align with the plane of the dehiscent superior canal. The symptoms and signs can be understood in terms of the effect of the dehiscence in creation of a third mobile window into the inner ear. The SCD syndrome has been diagnosed in 28 patients who were examined in the neuro-otology clinics at the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions from May 1995 through January 2001. The diagnosis is best established based upon the symptoms that are characteristic for the syndrome, the vertical-torsional eye movements evoked by sound or pressure stimuli noted on examination performed with Frenzel goggles, the lowered thresholds for responses to vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials, and CT imaging of the temporal bones.
...
PMID:Symptoms and signs in superior canal dehiscence syndrome. 1171 Apr 68
We report 3 patients who had acute peripheral vestibular dysfunction minutes to hours after a car collision with whiplash injury without head trauma. The accident was a frontal collision in 1 case, a rear impact in the second, and lateral in the third. All patients complained immediately of cervicalgia, headache, acute
vertigo
with a sensation of erroneous body movements, and slipping of image with head movements. A sudden sensation of tilting of the environment when driving, tinnitus, and
hyperacusis
were also described. The otoneurologic findings showed bilateral canalolithiasis in 1 patient and an acute peripheral vestibular deficit in 2 patients. Tilt of the subjective visual vertical was measured in all patients. Cerebral magnetic resonance imaging yielded normal findings. As angular and linear accelerometers, the vestibular organs are directly exposed to high forces generated by whiplash mechanisms.
Vertigo
generated by peripheral vestibular lesions is probably underestimated in whiplash injuries and may often be incorrectly attributed to cervical or cerebral lesions.
...
PMID:Acute peripheral vestibular deficits after whiplash injuries. 1265 17
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