Abstract

ObjectivesTo describe the human temporal bone pathology in two patients who incurred furosemide induced ototoxicity.Patients1) A 46‐year‐old woman in acute liver and renal failure treated with high doses of furosemide for anasarca who developed a rapidly progressive severe‐to‐profound asymmetric sensorineural hearing loss. 2) A 65‐year‐old woman with undifferentiated small cell carcinoma of the lung who received intravenous furosemide 1 day prior to death for pulmonary edema.InterventionsRemoval of temporal bones, histologic processing, and light microscopy of temporal bones.Main Outcome MeasuresTemporal bone histopathology and correlation with clinical and audiometric data.ResultsAll three temporal bones demonstrated edema and cystic changes in the stria vascularis. In the first case the furosemide exposure was associated with hearing loss and the pathological changes were more extensive including cystic changes in the Hensen's cells, collapse of Reissner's membrane and the tectorial membrane and diffuse loss of inner and outer hair cells with only modest reduction in the spiral ganglion cell population. In the second case, without attributable hearing loss, there was only modest reduction in hair cell and spiral ganglion cell counts. Pathological changes were not observed in the ampullae of the semicircular canals or epithelium of the saccular or utricular maculae in either case.ConclusionsThe temporal bone pathologic correlate for furosemide‐induced ototoxicity is edema and cystic degeneration of the stria vascularis. The degree of degenerative change appears dose‐dependent. We infer that pathological changes may occur in the absence of a measurable immediate clinical effect.Level of EvidenceNA.

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