Clinical aspects of inner ear deafness
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Bibliographic Information
Clinical aspects of inner ear deafness
Springer-Verlag, c1986
- : [hardcover]
- : pbk
- Other Title
-
Klinik der Innenohrschwerhörigkeiten
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Note
Translation of: Klinik der Innenohrschwerhörigkeiten. Originally published in: Verhandlungsbericht 1984 of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Hals-Nasen-Ohrenheilkunde, Kopf- und Halschirurgie, T. 1
Bibliography: p. 125-164
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The work on clinical aspects of inner ear deafness started out in 1983/1984 as a general review conceived by the Deutsche Gesellschaft fUr Hals-Nasen-Ohren-Heilkunde, Kopf-und Hals-Chirurgie (German Society for Oto-Rhino-Laryngology and Head and Neck Surgery) under the presidency of Professor Harald Feldmann, Munster. My task was to sift through the literature available at that time, to record the current status of knowledge, and if appropriate to describe existing new tendencies and potential developments. It was a conscious decision that the subject matter should extend to the entire field of inner ear deafness, though without reproducing too much of the detail given in the reviews already available, such as those by Vosteen (1961) on the biology of the inner ear, Beckmann (1962) on deafness in children, and Lehnhardt (1965) on industrial otopathies. The text contains only brief references to these, followed by more detailed expositions of what has come to light in the interim. In keeping with the broadness of the topic the list of references is extremely long, though we are aware that it is still not absolutely comprehensive. It is intended to give readers interested in specific topics an idea of the literature available and to provide a point of departure for further work. Scientific research is progressing and news insights appearing so fast, however, that the topicality of the material will be limited.
Table of Contents
1 Introduction and Definitions.- 2 General Features.- 2.1 Essential Physiological Data.- 2.2 Differential Audiometry.- 2.3 The Differentiation of Various Types of Inner Ear Deafness by Means of the Sound Threshold Curves.- 3 Special Features.- 3.1 Traumatic Inner Ear Deafness.- 3.1.1 Noise and Blast Injury.- 3.1.2 Explosion and Cranial Trauma.- 3.1.3 Rupture of the Windows (Round and Oval).- 3.1.3.1 Round Window Membrane Rupture.- 3.1.3.2 Ruptures in the Oval Window.- 3.2 Ototoxic Deafness.- 3.2.1 Aminoglycoside Antibiotics (AA).- 3.2.2 Loop Diuretics.- 3.2.3 Salicylates.- 3.2.4 Atoxyl.- 3.2.5 Other Ototoxic Substances.- 3.3 Infections.- 3.3.1 Inner Ear Deafness in Syphilis.- 3.4 Heredity.- 3.4.1 Monosymptomatic Hereditary Hearing Impairments.- 3.4.2 Syndromes Associated with Hereditary Inner Ear Deafness.- 3.4.2.1 Alport's Syndrome.- 3.4.2.2 Alport-like Syndromes.- 3.4.2.3 Renal Tubular Acidosis (RTA).- 3.4.2.4 Pendred's Syndrome.- 3.4.2.5 Syndromes Resembling Pendred's Syndrome.- 3.4.2.6 Disturbances of Parathyroid Hormone Metabolism.- 3.4.2.7 Refsum's Syndrome.- 3.4.2.8 Other Storage Diseases.- 3.4.2.9 Diabetes Mellitus.- 3.4.2.10 Sickle Cell Anemia.- 3.4.2.11 Skin Diseases.- 3.4.2.12 Other Hereditary Syndromes.- 3.5 Deafness in Childhood.- 3.5.1 Rubella.- 3.5.2 Cytomegaly.- 3.5.3 Toxoplasmosis.- 3.5.4 Erythroblastosis.- 3.5.5 Perinatal Asphyxia.- 3.5.6 Postnatal Deafness.- 3.6 Vascular and Metabolic Disturbances.- 3.6.1 Acute Inner Ear (Sensori-Neural) Deafness.- 3.6.1.1 Symptomatic Acute Deterioration of Hearing.- 3.6.1.2 Idiopathic "Sudden Hearing Loss".- 3.6.2 Chronic Inner Ear Deafness.- 3.6.2.1 Disturbances of Renal Function.- 3.6.2.2 Diabetes Mellitus.- 3.6.2.3 Disturbances of Fat Metabolism.- 3.6.2.4 Disturbances of Liver Function.- 3.6.2.5 Disturbances of Thyroid Function.- 3.6.2.6 Vascular Disturbances.- 3.7 Deafness in the Aged.- 3.8 Low Tone Deafness.- 3.9 Middle Ear Causes of Inner Ear Deafness.- 3.10 Immunological Diseases.- References.
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