Establishing the etiology of childhood hearing loss.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
The cause of hearing loss in children is often difficult to identify. We evaluated a cohort of 114 children (47 boys, 67 girls) referred with newly diagnosed hearing loss (non-otitis media) to identify factors predictive of etiology and type of hearing loss. Clinical (history and physical examination), laboratory, and radiographic data were collected. One hundred children (87.7%) had sensorineural hearing loss, and 14 (12.3%) had conductive or mixed hearing loss. The cause of hearing loss was identified in 54 children (48%). Patients with isolated aural atresia (n = 7) or with a known diagnosis of congenital cytomegalovirus infection (n = 21) were excluded from further data analysis. We conducted statistical analysis to identify factors predictive of the cause and type of hearing loss. Clinical factors that aided in identifying a cause included abnormal physical examination findings (p = 0.001) and craniofacial anomalies (p = 0.006). Computed tomography of the temporal bones was the only diagnostic test predictive of cause (p < 0.001). Factors predictive of the type of hearing loss detected (sensorineural vs. conductive or mixed) were abnormal physical examination findings (p = 0.01) and craniofacial anomalies (p = 0.004). An exhaustive laboratory or radiographic workup did not prove beneficial in identifying the etiology of hearing loss in our series.