2024 · Tsuzuki — Idiopathic Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: A Review Focused on the Contribution of Vascular Pathologies
Super-Abstract
Idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss (ISSNHL) — an abrupt hearing loss of unknown cause, sometimes with vertigo — is believed to be primarily driven by vascular impairment of the inner ear, including cochlear ischemia and infarction. This review covers the anatomy, clinical features, risk factors, and treatment strategies for ISSNHL, including hydrogen inhalation therapy among several experimental approaches. Importantly, the authors note that no evidence-based treatment currently exists for ISSNHL. This is a literature review.
Commentary
The inner ear's blood supply depends on a single end artery — the labyrinthine artery — with no collateral circulation. This anatomical vulnerability makes the cochlea exceptionally sensitive to vascular events, and ISSNHL shares strong epidemiological associations with stroke risk factors (diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidaemia, atrial fibrillation). The review thoroughly covers the pathological anatomy, diagnostic criteria (including intralabyrinthine haemorrhage, vestibular schwannoma exclusion), genetic risk factors, and prognostic indicators. Among treatments, it lists systemic steroids, intratympanic steroid injections, hyperbaric oxygen, prostaglandin E1, defibrinogenation therapy, and hydrogen inhalation — while honestly acknowledging none of these are evidence-based. H₂ inhalation's inclusion here reflects early research interest in its vascular-protective and anti-ischaemic properties, not established efficacy.
Key quotes
- „Treatment of ISSNHL with the aim of mitigating the vascular impairment in the inner ear includes systemically administered steroids, intratympanic steroid injections, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, prostaglandin E1, defibrinogenation therapy, and hydrogen inhalation therapy, but there is currently no evidence-based treatment for ISSNHL.“ — H₂ inhalation listed among experimental treatments; no evidence-based standard yet exists
- „The labyrinthine artery is the only end artery supplying blood to the inner ear, and it has three branches“ — anatomical vulnerability underlying vascular ISSNHL
- „Severe SSNHL patients with high CHADS2 scores, an index of stroke risk, have a significantly lower rate of vestibular schwannoma than severe SSNHL patients with low CHADS2 scores, suggesting that severe ISSNHL in individuals at high risk of stroke is caused by vascular impairments.“ — epidemiological link between stroke risk and ISSNHL causation
Our assessment
This is a clinical narrative review centred on ISSNHL pathophysiology and treatment. H₂ inhalation is mentioned as one experimental approach among several — the paper provides no efficacy data for H₂ specifically in ISSNHL. The authors' explicit statement that no evidence-based treatment for ISSNHL currently exists should be taken seriously. The review is valuable for understanding the vascular framework of ISSNHL but does not establish H₂ as an effective intervention. Clinical trials would be needed to determine whether H₂ inhalation provides a meaningful benefit in this condition.
Study design
- Type: narrative review · n: n/a (literature synthesis) · H₂ delivery: inhalation (referenced as one of several experimental modalities)
- Result: no efficacy data for H₂ in ISSNHL; H₂ inhalation listed alongside other experimental vascular-protective interventions; authors state no evidence-based treatment for ISSNHL currently exists
Abstract
Idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss (ISSNHL) is characterized by abruptly appearing hearing loss, sometimes accompanied by vertigo. Vascular pathologies (e.g., cochlear ischemia, or cochlear infarction) are one of the most likely causes of ISSNHL. This review aims to present current understanding of inner ear anatomy, clinical features of ISSNHL, and its treatment strategies. The labyrinthine artery is the only end artery supplying blood to the inner ear, and it has three branches: the anterior vestibular artery, the main cochlear artery, and the vestibulo-cochlear artery (VCA). Occlusion of the VCA can be caused by a variety of factors. The VCA courses through a narrow bone canal. ISSNHL is usually diagnosed after excluding retrocochlear pathologies of sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL), such as vestibular schwannoma. Therefore, a head MRI or assessing auditory brainstem responses are recommended for patients with SSNHL. Severe SSNHL patients with high CHADS2 scores, an index of stroke risk, have a significantly lower rate of vestibular schwannoma than severe SSNHL patients with low CHADS2 scores, suggesting that severe ISSNHL in individuals at high risk of stroke is caused by vascular impairments. Intralabyrinthine hemorrhage causes SSNHL or vertigo, as in ISSNHL. The diagnosis of intralabyrinthine hemorrhage requires careful interpretation of MRI, and a small percentage of patients diagnosed with ISSNHL may in fact have intralabyrinthine hemorrhage. Many studies have reported an association between ISSNHL and atherosclerosis or cardiovascular risk factors (e.g., diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia and cardiovascular disease), and subsequent risk of stroke in patients with ISSNHL may be elevated compared to controls. Increased hearing level on the healthy ear side, high Framingham risk score, high neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, high platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio, and severe white matter lesions may be poor prognostic factors for patients with ISSNHL. The association between thrombosis-related genes and susceptibility to ISSNHL has been reported in many studies (e.g., coagulation factor 2, coagulation factor 5, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, platelet-associated genes, a homocysteine metabolism-related enzyme gene, endothelin-1, nitric oxide 3, phosphodiesterase 4D, complement factor H, and protein kinase C-eta). Treatment of ISSNHL with the aim of mitigating the vascular impairment in the inner ear includes systemically administered steroids, intratympanic steroid injections, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, prostaglandin E1, defibrinogenation therapy, and hydrogen inhalation therapy, but there is currently no evidence-based treatment for ISSNHL. Breakthroughs in the unequivocal diagnosis and treatment of ISSNHL due to vascular impairment are crucial to improve quality of life.
Source & links
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