Abstract

We sought to investigate the functional integrity of the auditory nerve in patients with postoperative hearing loss after middle cranial fossa acoustic-tumor removal in a case-series descriptive study. The study setting was a tertiary referral center, a private otologic practice. The study population comprised seven patients who underwent a middle-cranial-fossa approach for unilateral acoustic-tumor resection and sustained postoperative anacusis with an anatomically intact auditory nerve. Four were men and three women; they ranged in age from 30 to 60 years; all underwent surgery between 1990 and 1994 and agreed to return to the center to participate in the study during 1995. Diagnostic electrical promontory stimulation was used to determine the functional integrity of the auditory nerve. Our main outcome measures were the presence or absence of discrete tone perception, electrical threshold, maximum acceptable level and dynamic range, gap detection and temporal difference limen during electrical promontory stimulation. Three of the seven patients demonstrated positive responses to electrical promontory testing (e.g., discrete tone perception). All three were able to perform the gap-detection and temporal difference limen tests. None of the preoperative characteristics was related to performance on promontory stimulation testing. We conclude that the middle cranial fossa approach permits anatomic—and, in some cases, functional auditory-nerve preservation. These data suggest that auditory rehabilitation in some patients who sustain anacusis after the middle cranial fossa approach to acoustic tumors, as in neurofibromatosis 2, may be provided with cochlear implantation. (Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 1998;119:588-92.)

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