Volume 15, Number 1
2005
PDF files of all articles are available from IOS
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Vestibular function at the end of intratympanic gentamicin treatment of patients
with Ménière's disease
pp. 49 - 58
Nicolas Perez and Julio Rama-Lopez
The aim of this study is to analyze the effects of intratympanic
gentamicin injections on vestibular function in 33 patients
with unilateral Meniere's Disease (according to AAO-HNS
guidelines 1995) that had been unresponsive to medical therapy
for at least one year. In such patients, the results of bedside
examination of vestibular function vestibular examination is
compared to those from laboratory tests. Intratympanic
gentamicin injections (27 mg/ml) were performed at weekly
intervals until symptoms or signs of vestibular hypofunction
developed in the treated ear. Vestibular function was evaluated
in two different rotatory chair tests. The parameters that were
specifically considered were the time constant of the
vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) after impulse rotation with a peak
chair velocity of 100°/s, and the phase and gain of the VOR
after the sinusoidal harmonic acceleration (SHA) test with a
peak chair velocity of 50°/s. After treatment, both the time
constant of the VOR after rotation towards the treated side and
the gain in the SHA test were significantly reduced. These
reductions were in accordance with the number of additional
signs observed upon bedside examination at the end of the
treatment. The changes observed in the VOR correlate well with
the results of bedside examination of vestibular function, which
in turn reflects the damage induced by intratympanic gentamicin
injection.
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