Hearing loss Hearing loss is the most common symptom relating to the ear. When taking a history, the following features will be important in reaching a diagnosis: age - presbyacusis (age-related degeneration of the hair cells of the inner ear) is very common over the age of 65, and is the most common cause of hearing loss speed of onset - a hearing loss that occurs over hours or days is more likely to be due to an acute inner ear pathology such as vascular insufficiency or a viral insult. Glue ear may also present in this way laterality - are both ears equally affected? Presbyacusis most commonly affects both ears equally, but an inner ear pathology is more likely to be unilateral tinnitus is often present with a hearing loss, and if it is bilateral, it is rarely an indicator of any sinister aetiology vertigo - if the hearing loss is sudden in onset and is associated with vertigo (an illusion of movement, see below), suspect inner ear pathology.
CITATION STYLE
Costello, D. (2010). Ear, Nose and Throat. In Chamberlain’s Symptoms and Signs in Clinical Medicine: An Introduction to Medical Diagnosis, 13th Edition (pp. 351–382). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.5005/jp/books/12996_6
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