Audiological findings in pediatric perineal allergic rhinitis (house dust mite allergy) patients
Özet
Allergic rhinitis is the type 1 hypersensitivity
reaction of the nasal mucosa and its primary mediator is Ig
E. It is most frequently observed in children and adolescents.
Our purpose in this study is to investigate the impact
of allergy on hearing functions in children with perineal
allergic rhinitis (house dust mite allergy). 50 perineal
allergic rhinitis (house dust mite allergy) patients (33 male,
17 female patients, aged between 6 and 15, average age
10.4) and 20 control patients (12 male, 8 female, aged
between 6 and 15, average age 11.2) underwent high frequency
pure tone audiometry, acoustic reflex, otacoustic
emission (OAE) and auditory brainstem potentials to assess
their auditory functions. No statistically significant difference
was detected between the study group and the control
group with respect to their hearing thresholds
(250–16,000 Hz). No statistically significant difference
was detected as a result of the comparison between the
study group and control group in terms of their signal–
noise ratios at Distortion Product OAE in all frequencies
(996–8,004 Hz). No statistically significant difference was
detected between the study group and the control group in
terms of the 1st, 3rd and 5th wave latencies and 1–3, 3–5
and 1–5 inter-peak values. This study is the first study
where the audiological functions of the pediatric perineal
allergic rhinitis (house dust mite allergy) patients were
assessed. No significant difference was detected between
the group of pediatric perineal allergic rhinitis (house dust
mite allergy) patients and the
URI
http://earsiv.uskudar.edu.tr/xmlui/handle/123456789/386http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23887239