Hearing loss/ Dizziness Flashcards

1
Q

in conductive hearing loss, where does weber’s test localise to

A

will be louder in the deaf ear

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2
Q

in sensorineural hearing loss, where does webers test localise to

A

will be louder in normal ear

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3
Q

if AC>BC what type of hearing loss is there

A

normal hearing

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4
Q

if BC > AC what type of hearing loss is there

A

conductive hearing loss

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5
Q

causes of conductive hearing loss

A

outer or middle ear abnormalities

ear infections
middle ear fluid
perforated ear drums

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6
Q

what does an audiogram show for conductive hearing loss

A

significant gap between air and bone conduction with bone being low

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7
Q

causes of sensorineural hearing loss

A

damage to hair cells in cochlea
damage to vestibulocochlear nerve

sound exposure 
raging 
ototoxic drugs 
birth defects 
rubella 
benign tumours on auditory nerve (schwannoma) 
genetic predisposition
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8
Q

what does the audiogram show for sensorineural hearing loss

A

no gap between bone and air conduction

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9
Q

what is mixed hearing loss

A

both conductive and sensorineural

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10
Q

what are the vertigo causing ENT conditions

A
Labrynthitis 
vestibular neuritis 
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo 
Meniere's disease
Acoustic neuroma/vestibular schwannoma
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11
Q

how does BPPV present

A

most common cause of vertigo
short lasting vertigo on specific movement
-looking up
-turning over in bed

episodes last seconds - mins

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12
Q

cause of BPPV

A

otolith crystals from the utricle get displaced into the semicircular canals (most commonly posterior)

this stimulates hair follicles during certain movements making your brain think you’re moving

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13
Q

how do you diagnose BPPV

A

dix-hallpike manoeuvre

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14
Q

treatment of BPPV

A

Epely manoeuvre

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15
Q

what is labrynthitis

A

inflammation of the inner ear (labyrinth) usually caused by infection

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16
Q

symptoms of labrynthitis

A
vertigo (prolonged - days) 
nausea/vomiting 
hearing loss 
nystagmus 
tinnitus 
flu-like symptoms 

(mainly hearing loss and tinnitus)

17
Q

how do you diagnose labrynthitis

A

history

audiogram - sensiruneural hearing loss
weber’s test - sensorineural hearing loss
Rinne’s test - sensorineural hearing loss

18
Q

treatment of labrynthitis

A

viral
-vestibular suppressants
benzodiazepines + anti-emetics + corticosteroids

bacterial
-vestibular suppressants, anti emetics

19
Q

what is vestibular neuronitis

A

infection of the vestibular nerve in the inner ear causing it to be inflamed and a loss of balance

usually viral

20
Q

main difference between vestibular neuritis and labrynthitis

A

vestibular neuronitis has NO tinnitus or hearing loss

21
Q

presentation of vestibular neuronitis

A

prolonged vertigo (days)
no tinnitus or hearing loss
prodromal symptoms

22
Q

treatment of vestibular neuronitits

A

vestibular suppressants - benzodiazepines
anti-emetics
corticosteroids

23
Q

how does meniere’s disease present

A

sensorineural hearing loss
profound vertigo (at least 2 episodes >20 mins)
comes in clusters - few times a week/month/year
worsening on affected side
sense of aural fullness on affected side

24
Q

cause of meniere’s disease

A

end-lymphatic high drops - overproduction or impaired absorption of endolymph - leads to mixing of endolymph and perilymph

25
Q

management of meniere’s disease

A
supportive treatment during episodes 
tinnitus therapy 
hearing aids 
intratympanic steroids/gentamicin 
surgery - end-lymphatic system surgery
26
Q

preventions for meiere’s disease

A
anti-vertigo medications 
-betahistine 
diuretics 
low salt diet 
reduce alcohol/caffeine consumption 
stress reduction
27
Q

what is acoustic neuroma/vestibular schwannoma

A

benign tumour that grows from the superior vestibular component of the vestibulochoclear nerve

grow 1-2mm per year

only cause serious problems if 2.5-2mm

28
Q

most common side of vestibular schwannoma

A

cerebellopontine notch

29
Q

presentation of vestibular schwannoma/acoustic neuroma

A
vertigo 
hearing loss
tinnitus 
facial numbness 
loss of balance 
absent corneal reflex
30
Q

histological finding of vestibular schwannoma

A

verocay bodies
nuclear palisading
spindle needles

31
Q

how do you diagnose vestibular schwannoma

A

MRI scan

audiogram - shows sensorineural loss

32
Q

treatment of vestibular schwannoma

A

observation - as they’re v slow growing

radiation and surgery if they get v big

33
Q

what causes nystagmus

A

impairment of vestibulo-occlear reflex

34
Q

what is otosclerosis

A

fixation of the stapes footplate to the oval window of the cochlea

35
Q

how does otosclerosis present

A

gradual onset conductive hearing loss

more common in females - progresses more rapidly in pregnancy

36
Q

treatment for otosclerosis

A

stapedectomy

37
Q

what is seen in audiometry for otosclerosis

A

Carhart’s notch at 2kHz