| Literature DB >> 34302524 |
Srikanth Nayak1,2, Arivudai Nambi1, Sathish Kumar3, P Hariprakash4, Pradeep Yuvaraj5, Basavaraj Poojar6.
Abstract
Numerous studies have documented the adverse effects of high-dose radiation on hearing in patients. On the other hand, radiographers are exposed to a low dose of ionizing radiation, and the effect of a low dose of radiation on hearing is quite abstruse. Therefore, the present systematic review aimed to elucidate the effect of low-dose ionizing radiation on hearing. Two authors independently carried out a comprehensive data search in three electronic databases, including PUBMED/MEDLINE, CINAHL, and SCOPUS. Eligible articles were independently assessed for quality by two authors. Cochrane Risk of Bias tool was used assess quality of the included studies. Two articles met the low-dose radiation exposure criteria given by Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) and National Council on Radiation Protection (NCRP) guidelines. Both studies observed the behavioral symptoms, pure-tone hearing sensitivity at the standard, extended high frequencies, and the middle ear functioning in low-dose radiation-exposed individuals and compared with age and gender-matched controls. One study assessed the cochlear function using transient-evoked otoacoustic emissions (TEOAE). Both studies reported that behavioral symptoms of auditory dysfunction and hearing thresholds at extended high frequencies were higher in radiation-exposed individuals than in the controls. The current systematic review concludes that the low-dose ionizing radiation may affect the hearing adversely. Nevertheless, further studies with robust research design are required to explicate the cause and effect relationship between the occupational low-dose ionizing radiation exposure and hearing.Entities:
Keywords: Hearing loss; Ionizing radiation; Low-dose radiation; Pure tone audiometry
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34302524 PMCID: PMC8551139 DOI: 10.1007/s00411-021-00926-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Environ Biophys ISSN: 0301-634X Impact factor: 1.925
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for study selection
| Inclusion criteria | |
| 1 | Participants exposed to radiation below 100 mGy/5 years, or less than 6 mGy/h |
| 2 | Articles contain at least one of the standard audiological tests such as pure tone audiometry, immittance audiometry, oto-acoustic emissions, brianstem auditory evoked responses |
| 3 | Human studies, regardless of age restriction |
| 4 | Articles published till March 2020 |
| 5 | Articles published in English |
| Exclusion criteria | |
| 1 | Participants with neurological and degenerative disorders or participants with congenital abnormalities |
| 2 | Duplicate data published in other included studies |
Fig. 1PRISMA chart for the current systematic review
Characteristics of studies included in the review
| Study | Study design | Participants | Exposure duration | Outcome measure | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karlidaǧ et al ( | Cross sectional | 57 in study group and 32 in age matched control group | 4–23 years | PTA, high-frequency audiometry, immittance audiometry (tympanometry and stapedial relflex) | Significant higher hearing threshold found in study group for 4, 6, 8, 14 and 16 kHz compared to the control group. The mean threshold of speech frequencies (500, 1000 and 2000 Hz) for study group were have significant higher threshold compared to control group. No difference found for immittance measurements | Authors suggest that subjects who exposed to radiation for a long period should be evaluated periodically using both standard and high-frequency audiometry could be beneficial |
| Pooja et al ( | Case control | 60 subjects in study group and 54 age- and sex-matched subjects in control group | 3–19 years | Tuning fork test (Rinne, weber and absolute bone conduction tests), PTA, tympanometry, stapedial reflex and TEOAE at 1, 2 and 4 kHz | Significant correlation found between exposure duration and hearing loss at 500 Hz and 10 kHz. Significant higher hearing threshold found for 12.5 and 16 kHz for study group compared to control group | Most of the frequencies have higher thresholds in the study group compared to controls. But only 12.5 and 16 kHz were significant. Cases also were more symptomatic than controls. If study done using larger group with long radiation exposure duration these changes might become significant |
Fig. 2Risk of bias rating by review author’s for each included studies
Fig. 3Risk of bias summary for each risk of bias presented in percentages for all included studies