Abstract

Objectives:Patients with pseudoexfoliation syndrome (PES) can also have sensorineural hearing loss as well as balance problems. Our aim was to evaluate vestibulocochlear system involvement in PES patients.Materials and Methods:The study included 16 subjects with PES (study group) with a mean age of 66.12±5.64 years and 17 healthy subjects (control group) with a mean age of 61.70±8.46 years. Both groups underwent ophthalmological, neuro-otological, audiological, and vestibular evaluation. Pure-tone audiometry and tympanometry were performed as audiological tests and bithermal caloric test and vestibular-evoked myogenic potential (VEMP) testing were used as vestibular tests. The Romberg, tandem Romberg, and Unterberger tests were also performed.Results:In the PES group, bithermal caloric tests revealed right canal paresis in 6 patients, left canal paresis in 3 patients, and bilateral stimulation loss in 2 patients, despite no clinical evidence of balance loss. Paresis was not detected in any of the control subjects. Unilateral VEMP responses could not be obtained in 3 patients in the PES group. The ocular PES patients whose VEMP waves were obtained differed significantly from the control group (p<0.05). In office tests for vestibular evaluation, pathologic findings were found in 7 of 16 patients in the study group and only 4 subjects in the control group. Audiological evaluation with pure-tone thresholds revealed sensorineural decline at 4000 and 8000 Hertz in the PES patients. A statistically significant difference was found between the study group and the control group (p<0.05).Conclusion:Patients with PES showed elevation in pure-tone thresholds and a decrease in superior and inferior vestibular nerve function, demonstrating that the vestibular system as well as the auditory system are affected in PES.

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