Abstract

In the past 10 years, 43 patients with acoustic neuroma have been operated on by the middle cranial fossa approach. In all cases, meticulous care was taken to preserve the cochlear function regardless of the degree of preoperative hearing disorder. Thirty-nine of 43 patients had various degrees of residual hearing; hearing was preserved in 16 of these (41%). The best result was obtained in patients with a tumor located less than 1 cm from the porus. The hearing preservation rate was 64% (11/17). The patients recovered hearing acuity quite well, especially at low frequencies in 2 cases who had a pure tone hearing level of more than 50 dB and less than 50% of speech discrimination. These 2 cases had a history of sudden deafness that was intractable 5 months preoperatively. Thus it is not correct to set certain criteria for hearing preservation for patients whose preoperative hearing may not be serviceable.

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