Abstract

In a guinea pig model, a standardized drill-induced injury to the body of the incus was applied, and the effects on hearing were characterized by electrocochleography. Drilling resulted in a threshold shift within seconds, and after 15min it averaged 35.7 dB for clicks, 35 dB nHL for 4 kHz bursts, 36.7 dB nHL for 6 kHz bursts and 39 dB nHL for 8 kHz bursts. The deterioration of the threshold shift remained stable throughout the 5-week post-operative observation period. In five animals a disarticulation of the incudostapedial joint was performed prior to drilling, but this did not reduce the threshold shift. Caution is mandatory during drilling around an intact ossicular chain to avoid a permanent sensorineural hearing loss, and disarticulation of the incudostapedial joint prior to driling has no protective value.

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