| Literature DB >> 31781229 |
Abstract
Sensorineural hearing loss is mainly acquired and affects an estimated 1.3 billion humans worldwide. It is related to aging, noise, infection, ototoxic drugs, and genetic defects. It is essential to identify reversible and preventable causes to be able to reduce the burden of this disease. Inflammation is involved in most causes and leads to tissue injury through vasospasm-associated ischemia. Vasospasm is reversible. This review summarized evidence linking inflammation-induced vasospasm to several forms of acquired sensorineural hearing loss. The link between vasospasm and sensorineural hearing loss is directly evident in subarachnoid haemorrhage, which involves the release of vasoconstriction-inducing cytokines like interleukin-1, endothelin-1, and tumour necrosis factor. These proinflammatory cytokines can also be released in response to infection, autoimmune disease, and acute or chronically increased inflammation in the ageing organism as in presbyacusis or in noise-induced cochlear injury. Evidence of vasospasm and hearing loss has also been discovered in bacterial meningitis and brain injury. Resolution of inflammation-induced vasospasm has been associated with improvement of hearing in autoimmune diseases involving overproduction of interleukin-1 from inflammasomes. There is mainly indirect evidence for vasospasm-associated sensorineural hearing loss in most forms of systemic or injury- or infection-induced local vascular inflammation. This opens up avenues in prevention and treatment of vascular and systemic inflammation as well as vasospasm itself as a way to prevent and treat most forms of acquired sensorineural hearing loss. Future research needs to investigate interventions antagonising vasospasm and vasospasm-inducing proinflammatory cytokines and their production in randomised controlled trials of prevention and treatment of acquired sensorineural hearing loss. Prime candidates for interventions are hereby inflammasome inhibitors and vasospasm-reducing drugs like nitric oxide donors, rho-kinase inhibitors, and magnesium which have the potential to reduce sensorineural hearing loss in meningitis, exposure to noise, brain injury, arteriosclerosis, and advanced age-related and autoimmune disease-related inflammation.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31781229 PMCID: PMC6875011 DOI: 10.1155/2019/4367240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Otolaryngol ISSN: 1687-9201
Figure 1Flow chart of literature search.
Clinical manifestations, indicators of disease severity, and SNHL in bacterial meningitis (data from [10]).
| Cases with SNHL after bacterial meningitis ( | Controls without SNHL after bacterial meningitis ( |
| Odds ratio (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Signs of shock on admission | 13 | 48 | 0.65 | 0.78 (0.35–1.76) |
| Mechanical ventilation | 2 | 16 | 0.24 | 0.36 (0.05–1.76) |
| Seizures | 10 | 29 | 0.96 | 1.11 (0.45–2.71) |
| Focal neurological signs | 16 | 9 | <0.001 | 9.0(3.11–27.7) |
Figure 2Mechanism of action of interleukin-1 (IL-1) via G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR) on reduction of nitric oxide (NO) production by reducing nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity in the vascular endothelial cell (EC) and by activation of the enzyme Rho kinase via RhoA in the vascular smooth muscle cell to activate by phosphorylation through protein kinase C (PKC) myosine phosphatase targeting subunit-1 (MYPT1), protein kinase C-potentiated phosphatase inhibitor-17 (CPI-17 and myosine binding subunit (MBS)), which all three inhibit the myosine light chain phosphatase (MLCP) which dephosphorylates the myosine light chain, a process, which is necessary for smooth muscle relaxation. This process thus causes vasoconstriction.
Evidence for effectiveness of magnesium in prevention of noise-induced SNHL from randomised controlled trials in humans.
| Design | Number of participants | Age of participants | Intervention | Outcome | Critical appraisal | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Placebo-controlled double blind | 28 participants in total, number per group unknown | 22 to 75 years of age, mean 53 years | 6.7 mmol of magnesium aspartate orally once a day | Improvement of sudden SNHL excluding noise, mumps, Meniere's disease, and traumatic SNHL: more patients with improved hearing and a greater improvement in those with SSNHL were noted in the magnesium treated group across all frequencies assessed | The investigation did not report method of randomisation, number randomised into each group, and number of patients with improved hearing for each frequency | [ |
|
| ||||||
| Placebo-controlled double blind | 150 participants in each group | 17.7 to 18.5 years old | 6.7 mmol of magnesium aspartate orally once a day | Noise-induced permanent hearing threshold shifts in 11.2% in the magnesium group versus 21.5% in the placebo group ( | The method of randomisation was unclear, and the duration of prophylactic treatment and timing of measurement were not specified | [ |
|
| ||||||
| Placebo-controlled double blind | 215 participants, 105 in the magnesium group, and 110 in the placebo group | 18-year-old men | 6.7 mmol of magnesium aspartate orally once a day | There was a noise-induced pure tone audiometry threshold shift (>25 dB at 3 to 8 kHz) in 11.2% (both ears) of the magnesium group and 21.5% in the left ear and 28.5% in the right ear in the placebo group | The method of randomisation was unclear, and the duration of prophylactic treatment and timing of sampling were not specified | [ |
Meta-analyses of randomised controlled trials in humans to treat SNHL with steroids.
| Design | Number of participants/number of randomised controlled trials | Age of participants | Intervention | Outcome | Critical appraisal | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Systematic review with meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials | 1394/14 | Unknown | Combined intratympanic and systemic use of steroids as a first-line treatment for sudden SNHL | The proportion of patients with hearing improvement as the outcome measure was observed in 13 studies, which resulted in an odds ratio (OR) of 2.50 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.95–2.1) | The differences in treatment regimes or unclear treatment invalidate the pooling of results | [ |
|
| ||||||
| Systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials | 416/8 | Mean age 47 to 60 years | Isolated intratympanic dexamethasone for sudden SNHL | Pure-tone audiogram improvement criterion did not reach statistical significance (OR 5 0.39, CrI 5 0.11–1.27) | Large heterogeneity was noted among these studies | [ |
|
| ||||||
| Systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised, controlled trials | 203 /5 | Unknown overall age distribution | Intratympanic steroid therapy as a salvage treatment for sudden SNHL after failure of conventional therapy | The meta-analysis data were derived from 5RCTs of 102 patients in the ITS group and 101 control subjects; the mean difference and 95% CI of the PTA improvement (indB) were 7.43 and 4.25–10.60, respectively | The authors suspected that the small number of trials (5) available for their meta-analysis was due to publication bias with studies reporting nonsignificant results under represented | [ |
|
| ||||||
| Systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised, controlled trials | 1166/15 | Unknown | Treatment of sudden SNHL | Three articles (181 subjects), steroid versus placebo analysis: OR = 1.52 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.83–2.77); six articles (702 subjects) in systemic versus intratympanic steroids analysis (OR 1.14 (95% CI: 0.82–1.59)); six articles (283 subjects): salvage treatment analysis (OR: 6.04 (95% CI: 3.26–11.2)) | Numbers are small in the subgroup analyses shown; a clinically significant effect may have been missed | [ |
Directness of evidence for a role of inflammation-induced vasospasm in conditions associated with acquired SNHL.
| Condition associated with SNHL | Evidence for vasospasm | Evidence of link of SNHL to vasoconstrictors | Evidence for response to anti-inflammatory treatment | Evidence for treatment response to vasodilators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autoimmune | Features | Features | Features | Not investigated |
| Bacterial meningitis | Features | Features | Features | Features |
| Phonic injury | Direct | Direct | Direct | Not investigated |
| Subarachnoid haemorrhage | Features | Features | Features | Not investigated |
| Brain trauma | Increased risk | No evidence | No evidence | Not investigated |
| Presbyacusis | No evidence | No evidence | No evidence | Not investigated |
| Migraine | Features | Not investigated | Not investigated | Not investigated |
| Sudden SNHL | Direct | Not investigated | Direct | Direct |