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. 2000 Nov;123(5):593-7.
doi: 10.1067/mhn.2000.109486.

Clinicoepidemiologic features of sudden deafness diagnosed and treated at university hospitals in Japan

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Clinicoepidemiologic features of sudden deafness diagnosed and treated at university hospitals in Japan

T Nakashima et al. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2000 Nov.

Abstract

Nationwide epidemiologic surveys were done 3 times by the Research Committee of the Ministry of Health and Welfare in Japan to investigate the number of patients and clinical manifestations of idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss (sudden deafness). The first, second, and third surveys were carried out during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, respectively. For each patient, we have compiled data regarding age, sex, onset day, presence or absence of vertigo, and hearing ability, including initial and final audiograms, in a computer in the Nagoya University Computer Center. Regarding patients who visited university hospitals, complete data were collected for 421 subjects (age: 40.2+/-15.4 years, female: 203, male: 218) between July 1973 and June 1974, for 813 subjects (age: 45.1+/-15.4 years, female: 407, male: 406) in 1987, and for 1112 subjects (age: 49.1+/-16.0 years, female: 591, male: 521) in 1993. The number of patients with sudden deafness treated in university hospitals in Japan has increased, especially in the elderly population. This increase is associated with population increase and age-adjusted incidence rates per 100,000 in the elderly population. The initial and final hearing levels in the first survey were worse than those in the second and third surveys; there was no significant difference in hearing between the second and third surveys. The hearing levels were worse in children and elderly patients than in the other age groups.

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