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Vestibular pathology in children with enlarged vestibular aqueduct
Author(s) -
Yang Christina J.,
Lavender Violette,
MeinzenDerr Jareen K.,
Cohen Aliza P.,
Youssif Mostafa,
Castiglione Micheal,
Manickam Vairavan,
Bachmann Katheryn R.,
Greinwald John H.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the laryngoscope
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.181
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1531-4995
pISSN - 0023-852X
DOI - 10.1002/lary.25890
Subject(s) - posturography , vestibular system , medicine , vertigo , audiology , vestibular evoked myogenic potential , laterality , population , surgery , environmental health
Objectives/Hypothesis To establish the prevalence of abnormal vestibular test findings in children with enlarged vestibular aqueduct (EVA) and determine if these findings correlate with clinical symptoms, radiographic findings (EVA size and laterality), audiometric findings, and genetic testing in these patients. Study Design Prospective cohort. Methods Patients 3 to 12 years of age with hearing loss and imaging findings consistent with EVA treated at our tertiary care institution were sequentially enrolled from 2009 to 2011. The following six outcome measurements were analyzed: audiometric findings, EVA laterality, temporal bone measurements, genetic testing, vestibular testing (cervical‐evoked myogenic potentials, posturography, rotational chair, and calorics), and vestibular symptoms. Results Twenty‐seven patients with EVA (mean age 9.2 years, 48% female) were enrolled in and completed the study. Vertigo was reported in six patients. Twenty‐four of 27 (89%) had at least one abnormal vestibular test result. Midpoint and operculum size correlated with directional preponderance ( P = .042 and P = .032, respectively). Also, high‐frequency pure tone average (HFPTA) correlated with unilateral weakness ( P = .002). Walking at a later age correlated with abnormal posturography results. There was no correlation between EVA laterality and vestibular test findings. Conclusion We found a high rate of vestibular pathology in children with EVA; however, the prevalence of abnormal vestibular test findings in this patient population was not correlated with vestibular symptoms. Enlarged vestibular aqueduct size, HFPTA, and walking at a later age were correlated with abnormal vestibular test findings. In view of these results, it may be prudent to consider vestibular testing in children with these clinical characteristics. Level of Evidence 2b. Laryngoscope , 126:2344–2350, 2016

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