Effect of sudden sensorineural hearing loss patients with or without dizziness/vertigo on auditory prognosis in patients with moderately severe hearing loss and above.
10.13201/j.issn.2096-7993.2025.03.007
- Author:
Changshuo SHAN
1
;
Xiaonan WU
2
;
Guohui CHEN
2
;
Yun GAO
2
;
Qiuju WANG
1
Author Information
1. Hearing and Speech Rehabilitation Institute,Binzhou Medical University,Yantai,264003,China.
2. Department of Audiology and Vestibular Medicine,Senior Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery,the Sixth Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
dizziness;
hearing loss degree;
prognosis;
sudden sensorineural hearing loss;
vertigo
- MeSH:
Humans;
Male;
Female;
Hearing Loss, Sudden/complications*;
Adult;
Dizziness/complications*;
Prognosis;
Middle Aged;
Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/complications*;
Vertigo/complications*;
Young Adult;
Adolescent
- From:
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery
2025;39(3):223-227
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To analyze the incidence and impact on the auditory prognosis of vertigo/dizziness in sudden sensorineural hearing loss patients with moderately severe hearing loss and above. Methods:Clinical data of patients with unilateral sudden sensorineural hearing loss hospitalized from January 2008 to December 2022, aged 18-60 years, PTA≥50 dB HL, and within 14 days of onset were selected. Based on the clinical records of sudden sensorineural hearing loss patients, we determined whether they were accompanied by vertigo/dizziness. The degree of hearing loss is referenced to the 2021 WHO grading criteria and divided into the moderately severe, severe, profound, and total deafness groups. The SPSS 22.0 software was applied to analyze the difference in the auditory prognosis between sudden sensorineural hearing loss patients with moderately severe hearing loss and above who have dizziness/vertigo and those who do not. Results:A total of 697 patients with moderately severe hearing loss and above were collected, including 382 males and 315 females, with an average age of(40.8±11.0) years. The proportions of sudden sensorineural hearing loss patients with dizziness/vertigo among those with moderately severe to total deafness hearing loss were 18.4%, 35.7%, 47.9%, and 76.4% respectively. Compared to the moderately severe, severe, profound, and total deafness groups, the difference was statistically significant(P<0.001). The complete recovery rates of sudden sensorineural hearing loss patients with moderately severe to total deafness hearing loss were 28.2%, 25.2%, 18.2%, and 1.9% respectively, and the total effective rates were 72.8%, 83.5%, 86.7%, and 78.0% respectively. There were statistically significant differences in complete recovery rate(P<0.001), significant efficiency rate(P<0.001), effective rate(P=0.026), and no recovery rate(P=0.022) among the moderately severe, severe, profound, and total deafness groups. The differences in complete recovery between sudden sensorineural hearing loss patients with and without vertigo/dizziness were statistically significant in the moderately severe, severe, profound, and total deafness groups(P<0.05), while the total effective rates were only statistically significant in the profound group compared to those without vertigo/dizziness(P<0.05). After inpatient treatment, sudden sensorineural hearing loss patients with dizziness/vertigo had statistically significant final hearing thresholds at 4 000 and 8 000 Hz for moderately severe hearing loss patients, 2 000-8 000 Hz for severe hearing loss patients, 500-8 000 Hz for profound hearing loss patients, and 2 000-8 000 Hz for total deafness patients compared to those without dizziness/vertigo(P<0.05). Conclusion:The higher the degree of hearing loss in patients with moderately severe hearing loss and above, the higher the proportion of accompanied vertigo/dizziness. Patients with vertigo/dizziness have poorer recovery of high-frequency hearing, and the complete recovery rate is significantly lower than the patients without vertigo/dizziness.