Posts Tagged ‘systemic steroids’

Steroids and sudden hearing loss

Steroids and sudden hearing lossSteroids cannot be considered as a first-line therapy for treating patients with sudden hearing loss though they may be presently recommended for the ailment, as per a systematic review and meta-analysis both published in an issue of Archives of Otolaryngology, Head & Neck Surgery.

Sudden sensorineural hearing loss can be regarded as a hearing impairment complication resulting in hearing loss up to a minimum of 30 decibels over a minimum of three test frequencies in three days.

From News-Medical.Net:

For the systematic review, 21 trials were identified and evaluated, all of which used measures from hearing tests to define treatment outcomes. “Only two studies used identical criteria to define sudden sensorineural hearing loss,” the authors write. “The method of randomization was described in two studies. Validity scores ranged from two to eight (of nine). Positive results were reported favoring systemic steroids, intratympanic [inside the inner ear] steroids, batroxobin, magnesium, vitamin E and hyperbaric oxygen, although there were serious limitations in each study with a positive finding.”

This includes the article cited as the landmark study for the use of steroids, which was not described as a randomized trial and therefore may have produced exaggerated treatment effects, the authors note. The authors suggest that this study also used inconsistent doses of steroids and did not measure outcomes at the same time for all participants. “The study therefore does not inform the otolaryngologist of what dose of steroids to use, nor at what time after treatment to expect improvement,” the authors write.

Data pertaining to all randomized clinical trials that were published between 1966-2006 was compiled by Anne Elizabeth Conlin, B.A. & Sc., M.D., of the University of Ottawa, Ontario, and Lorne S. Parnes, M.D., F.R.C.S.C., of the University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.

It was then remarked that systemic steroids cannot be termed as the gold treatment standard for treating patients with sudden sensorineural hearing loss.

Posted on February 9th, 2010 by admin  |  No Comments »

Steroid treatment analyzed for sudden hearing loss

hearing-lossAccording to a published review in the Archives of Otolaryngology, Head & Neck Surgery there is little proof to suggest that steroids are effective for treating patients suffering from sudden hearing loss.

Sudden sensorineural hearing loss or sudden hearing loss is believed to affect approximately 5-20 out of every 100,000 individuals on a yearly basis.

Some of the currently followed treatment options are vitamins, herbs, minerals, antiviral medications, hyperbaric oxygen, and agents capable of diluting the blood.

From News-Medical.Net:

Anne Elizabeth Conlin, B.A. & Sc., M.D., of the University of Ottawa, Ontario, and Lorne S. Parnes, M.D., F.R.C.S.C., of the University of Western Ontario, London, Canada, searched for all randomized clinical trials evaluating treatments for sudden hearing loss published between 1966 and 2006.

For the systematic review, 21 trials were identified and evaluated, all of which used measures from hearing tests to define treatment outcomes. “Only two studies used identical criteria to define sudden sensorineural hearing loss,” the authors write. “The method of randomization was described in two studies. Validity scores ranged from two to eight (of nine). Positive results were reported favoring systemic steroids, intratympanic [inside the inner ear] steroids, batroxobin, magnesium, vitamin E and hyperbaric oxygen, although there were serious limitations in each study with a positive finding.”

The review authors noted that treating sudden hearing loss is complicated as the exact cause of this ailment often remains unknown. It was also noted that the complication can be termed as a medical emergency without a rational treatment approach or scientific understanding of its cause.

Posted on January 15th, 2010 by admin  |  No Comments »

 
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