Audiological Evaluation in Hypertensive Patients

  • Madhavi Pant Nepalgunj Medical College, Kolalpur (Kathmandu), Nepal - 509102
  • Upendra Bhandari Patan Academy of Health Sciences, Kathmandu, Nepal - 509102
  • Deepa Malla Surnyvale, Post-Acute Center, California, U.S.A - 400099
  • Aashika Khadka International Friendship Children’s Hospital, Kathmandu, Nepal - 509102
  • Late Prof. Subhash Chandra Mishra Nepalgunj Medical College, Kolalpur (Kathmandu), Nepal - 509102

Abstract

Every fifth person is affected by impaired hearing. Hearing loss, regardless of commitment, has an impact on people's quality of life, and even when acquired later in life, it develops gradually and impairs spoken communication, affecting sociability, employment, and earning potential. Instead of receiving social sympathy, the person is ridiculed. Among vascular diseases, arterial hypertension is the most common, causing pathological structural changes in the heart and blood vessels. By affecting the vascular system, high blood pressure can produce inner ear bleeding and alter perfusion, resulting in progressive or sudden hearing loss. The present research project is undertaken to serve as a basis for greater awareness of prevention and restoration of hearing loss occurring in association with systemic infirmities like silently progressing arterial hypertension. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the hearing functions of patients of both sexes with hypertension and compare it with normal individuals. To assess the possibility of reversibility of hearing loss with control of hypertension. A prospective comparative study including all patients with hypertension in one group and normal subjects in another who fulfilled the inclusion criteria in Nepalgunj Medical College during the time period of 1st December 2014 to 30th January 2016 was carried out. All the individuals were subjected to a thorough E.N.T. examination. The audiological evaluation was done with Special tests of audiometry. Blood pressure level was estimated at the primary visit and 3 subsequent visits. mild to severe degree of hearing loss was found in 16 subjects (32%) as compared to control cases (statistically significant). There was sensorineural hearing loss in 28 ears (13 Rt. Ears and 15 Lt. Ears) amongst hypertensives (statistically significant). Overall, moderately severe and severe hearing losses were more often associated with stage 1 hypertension than stage 2 as is observed for both ears which are statistically significant. The mean threshold of the hearing was 28.84±16.84 and 24.16±11.31 amongst stage 1 and stage 2 hypertensives respectively. There was no statistically significant alteration of the hearing status of the hypertensives on subsequent follow-up, baring 3 cases that showed some recovery on the last follow-up. Hypertension as compared to control cases has a statistically significant influence on the hearing status of subjects above 31 years of age. Present data show that they have only marginally raised threshold for speech frequencies and it is at 4 kHz and 8 kHz that they are most often affected with hypertension.


 

Keywords: Hearing loss, Hypertension, Pure Tone Audiometry, Sensorineural Hearing Loss

References

1. Anonymous. Scope of practice, speech-language pathology and audiology. Committee on interprofessional relationships American speech-language-hearing association. ASHA. 1990;(2):1-2.
2. Sharma D, Bkc M, Rajbhandari S, Raut R, Baidya SG, Kafle PM, et al. Study of prevalence, awareness and control of hypertension in a suburban area of Kathmandu, Nepal. Indian Heart J. 2006;58(1):34-7.
3. TRNAs DJ, Katz J. presbycusis. Tratado A. Sao Paulo: Manole. 1989.
4. Ohinata Y, Makimoto K, Kawakami M, Haginomori SI, Araki M, Takahashi H. Blood viscosity and plasma viscosity in patients with sudden deafness. Acta Otolaryngol. 1994;114(6):601-7.
5. Rarey KE, Ma YL, Gerhardt KJ, Fregly MJ, Garg LC, Rybak LP. Correlative evidence of hypertension and altered cochlear microhomeostasis: electrophysiological changes in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. Hear Res. 1996;102(1-2):63-9.
6. Leitschuh M, Chobanian A. Vascular changes in hypertension. Med Clin North Am. 1987;71(5):827-41.
7. Henri HC, Rugg P. Hypertension: context and management. Textbook of cardiovascular medicine, 3rd ed. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins: Philadelphia. 2007:88-108
8. Yildirim N. Hearing impairment in vascular disorders. Van Tip Dergisi. 2012;19(3):149-57.
9. Moore BC. Perceptual consequences of cochlear hearing loss and their implications for the design of hearing aids. Ear Hear. 1996;17(2):133-61
10. Markova M. The cochleovestibular syndrome in hypertension. Cesk Otolaryngol. 1992; 52(2):97-104.
11. Capoani M.F, Garcia Mondelli, Cintra Lopes A. Relation between arterial hypertension and hearing loss. Intl Arch. Otorhinolaryngol. Sao Paulo. 2009; 13(1):63-68.
12. De Moraes Marchiori LL, De Almeida Rego Filho E, Matsuo T. Hypertension as a factor associated with hearing loss. Rev Bras Otorrinolaringol. 2006;72(4):533-40.
13. Sharma K, Gandhi A, Ahluwalia H, Sahni JK. Hearing sensitivity in 40-60 years old hypertensive male adults. Indian J Physiol Pharmacol. 2015; 59 (2):242.
14. Tan TY, Rahmat O, Prepageran N, Fauzi A, Noran NH, Raman R. Hypertensive retinopathy and sensorineural hearing loss. Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2009; 61(4):275-9.
15. Baraldi GS, Almeida LC, Borges AC. Hearing loss and hypertension: findings in an older by group. Rev Bras Otorrinolaringol. 2004; 70(5):640-4.
Statistics
417 Views | 304 Downloads
How to Cite
Madhavi Pant, Upendra Bhandari, Deepa Malla, Aashika Khadka, and Late Prof. Subhash Chandra Mishra. “Audiological Evaluation in Hypertensive Patients”. Current Research in Pharmaceutical Sciences, Vol. 12, no. 3, Nov. 2022, pp. 147-55, doi:10.24092/CRPS.2022.120304.
Section
Research Articles