A case of acute bilateral retrocochlear hearing loss as an initial symptom of unilateral thalamic hemorrhage

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Abstract

A speech discrimination test is a test using a list of 25 phonetically balanced monosyllables. It is often overlooked but significant enough for pure tone audiometry. Many physicians have performed pure tone audiometry but without a speech discrimination test. A 73-year-old woman visited our clinic complaining of sudden bilateral hearing loss. Pure tone audiometry showed only bilateral high frequency loss. However, speech discrimination had decreased markedly. We decided to follow-up after 1 week of Ginexin-F® (ginkgo leaf extract) and Nafril® (nafronyl oxalate). She felt a gait disturbance within 2 days. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a left thalamic hemorrhage. After a 1 month hospitalization, the hematoma subsided, and speech discrimination recovered 3 months later. Acute hearing loss due to thalamic hemorrhage that recovered has never been reported. We report the first case of retrocochlear hearing loss that occurred with a thalamic hemorrhage in a patient who recovered.

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APA

Park, M. J., Yoon, S. W., Kim, K. H., & Kim, Y. J. (2014). A case of acute bilateral retrocochlear hearing loss as an initial symptom of unilateral thalamic hemorrhage. Korean Journal of Audiology, 18(2), 80–84. https://doi.org/10.7874/kja.2014.18.2.80

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