Bilateral total deafness due to pontine haematoma.
Open Access
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- case report
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
- Vol. 61 (6) , 628-631
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.61.6.628
Abstract
A 64 year old woman with a predominantly midline pontine tegmental haemorrhage presented with bilateral total deafness. One week later reasonable pure-tone thresholds appeared but she still had total bilateral loss of speech discrimination. At that time contralateral acoustic reflexes were bilaterally absent, whereas ipsilateral acoustic reflexes and waves IV and V of the brainstem auditory evoked potential were bilaterally preserved. It is proposed that this patient's hearing deficit was due to inactivation of the ventral acoustic striae decussating in the trapezoid body. This case supports the contention that in humans the ventral pontine acoustic decussation carries most of the neural signals required for hearing and perhaps all the neural signals required for speech perception.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Auditory NeurophysiologyJournal Of Clinical Neurophysiology, 1994
- Role of acoustic striae in hearing: Mechanism for enhancement of sound detection in catsHearing Research, 1994
- The effect of brainstem lesions on brainstem auditory evoked potentials in the catHearing Research, 1990
- Selective Unilateral Absence or Attenuation of Wave V of Brain-Stem Auditory Evoked Potentials With Intrinsic Brain-Stem LesionsArchives of Neurology, 1988
- The Site of the Lesion Causing Deafness in Multiple SclerosisScandinavian Audiology, 1988
- Locked‐in syndrome wit.h deafnessNeurology, 1985
- Auditory Brain-Stem Potentials With Unilateral Pontine HemorrhageArchives of Neurology, 1985
- Pure word deafness after bilateral primary auditory cortex infarctsNeurology, 1984
- Lateralization of brainstem lesions by brainstem auditory evoked potentialsNeurology, 1981
- Masked Speech Audiometry in Central DeafnessActa Oto-Laryngologica, 1972