Acta Otorhinolaryngol Belg
February 2004
The case of a 5 year old boy who had a right petrous bone fracture with right CSF otorrhea and deafness is reported. This child presented, three years after the trauma, a right side otitis media, complicated by meningitis and pneumococcal sepsis, which might have as consequence a left side deafness. The bilateral deafness and the early possibility for cochlear ossification made us decide rapidly on a cochlear implant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe incidence of deafness is high in children born prematurely as compared with the general population of children. Early start of the rehabilitation being an important prognosis factor the detection of deafness must be made as early as possible. Therefore a careful attention must be paid to any early signs of possible hearing imparment; parents concerns in particular must always be considered seriously.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuropathol Exp Neurol
May 1996
Brain myelinolysis occurs after excessive correction (delta SNa > 20 mEq/1/24 hours) of chronic hyponatremia. However, we showed recently that the mechanisms leading to brain myelinolysis remain reversible. Indeed, reinduction of the hyponatremia by water administration despite 12 hours of sustained excessive correction could prevent the development of demyelination in rats still asymptomatic at that time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain myelinolysis could develop after excessive correction (delta SNa > 20-25 mEq/1/24 hour [h]) of chronic hyponatremia; however, this neurological event is not recognized as a complication of hypernatremia when arising from a normonatremic baseline. Previous animal studies were unable to reproduce these brain lesions in hypernatremia after acute increase of serum sodium to moderately hypernatremic levels. We hypothesize that to produce brain dehydration and myelinolysis from normonatremic baseline requires a more important osmotic gradient than when starting from hyponatremic state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain myelinolysis occurs after correction of chronic hyponatremia in rats when the magnitude of increase in serum sodium (delta SNa) exceeds 20 to 25 mEq/liter/24 hr (the critical threshold for brain). We tested the hypothesis that after a sustained excessive correction, brain lesions (BL) could be prevented by subsequently decreasing the serum sodium below the critical threshold for brain through the administration of hypotonic fluids. After three days of severe (< 115 mEq/liter) chronic (3 days) hyponatremia, 55 rats were submitted to an excessive correction (delta SNa > 25 mEq/liter) by a single i.
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