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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Audiovestibular results after surgery for cerebellopontine angle meningiomas.

Meningiomas are the second most common cerebellopontine angle (CPA) tumor. The reported rates of hearing preservation following surgical removal vary between 32% and 100%. There is only one recent report discussing vestibular function after CPA meningioma removal. In this series of 31 patients with CPA meningiomas, 16 patients had their tumors removed via the retrosigmoid approach. All 16 had audiovestibular assessment pre- and postsurgery and were the subjects of this study. Class A hearing is socially useful hearing and is defined as a pure tone average ( PTA; average of 500 Hz and 1, 2 and 4 kHz) of < 30 dB and speech discrimination scores (SDS) of > 70%. Class B hearing is serviceable hearing, defined as PTA of < 50 dB and SDS of > 50%. Nine patients had class A hearing, and two had class B hearing presurgery. Socially useful hearing was preserved in six of nine (67%) patients in whom it was present before surgery, and serviceable or better hearing was preserved in eight of 11 (73%). Vestibular symptomatology and examination findings improved despite a decrease in the number of patients with intact caloric function postsurgery. Patients who retained vestibular function on caloric testing were symptomatically better than those who lost caloric function. These results confirm that excellent audiovestibular function is possible after CPA meningioma surgery.[1]

References

  1. Audiovestibular results after surgery for cerebellopontine angle meningiomas. Grey, P.L., Baguley, D.M., Moffat, D.A., Hardy, D.G., Beynon, G.J. The American journal of otology. (1996) [Pubmed]
 
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