-
Multicenter Study
High prevalence of sensorineural hearing loss among survivors of neonatal congenital diaphragmatic hernia. Western Canadian ECMO Follow-up Group.
- C M Robertson, P Y Cheung, M M Haluschak, C A Elliott, and N J Leonard.
- Neonatal and Infant Follow-up Clinic, Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital Site, Capital Health Authority, Edmonton, Alberta.
- Am J Otol. 1998 Nov 1; 19 (6): 730-6.
ObjectiveThis study aimed to determine the prevalence of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in 2-5-year-old survivors with neonatal respiratory failure due to congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) with or without the need for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO).Study DesignThe study design was a prospective, multicenter, longitudinal outcome study of consecutively surviving neonates admitted to a single tertiary intensive care unit.SettingThe study was conducted at four audiologic departments affiliated with tertiary-level intensive care follow-up programs.PatientsThirty-seven surviving children receiving neonatal intensive care from February 1989 through January 1995 for neonatal respiratory failure due to CDH were studied. Excluded were 15 children with early death and I child lost to follow-up.InterventionThe initial treatment depended on the severity of neonatal respiratory failure: ECMO-treated (n=31, 20 survivors) (death before ECMO initiation, 2) and non-ECMO treated (n=20, 17 survivors, another survivor lost to follow-up).Main Outcome MeasureEarly childhood audiologic test results were measured.ResultsSensorineural hearing loss was found in almost 60% of subjects: ECMO-treated, 12 (60%) of 20; non-ECMO-treated, 10 (59%) of 17. Of the 22 children with SNHL, 16 had mild- to-moderate low-frequency sloping to moderate-to-severe high-frequency loss. Of the remaining, six had severe-to-profound loss at 500 Hz and above. Seventeen children had normal responses to sound as newborns or in infancy. Five children were not tested. Documented progression was found in nine children. Twenty children currently are using amplification, and 2 have had cochlear implantation.ConclusionsOf children with CDH in this area presenting early with severe neonatal respiratory failure, SNHL developed in 60% by 2-5 years of life. Ongoing monitoring of the hearing status of children with CDH is imperative.
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