Abstract

Recent reports suggested that even moderate sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL) can be partly responsible for a loss of gray matter volume in the primary auditory cortex, hence reducing the capacity of the auditory cortical areas to react to sound stimulation. There is also evidence for a plastic reorganization of brain functional networks visible as enhanced local functional connectivity. The aim of this study was to use rs-fMRI, in conjunction with graph- theoretical analysis and a newly developed functional "disruption index" to study whole-brain as well as local functional changes in patients with acute and unilateral sensorineural hearing loss. No statistically significant differences in global or local network measures we found between SSNHL patients and healthy controls. However, when analyzing local metrics through the disruption index k, we found negative values for k which were statistically different from zero both in single subject analysis. Additionally, we found several associations between graph-theoretical metrics and clinical parameters.

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