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I was just recently diagnosed with sleep apnea and I just got my machine today. My sleep tests indicated, among other things, that my blood oxygen level would drop as low as 58%.
About 12 to 13 years ago I experienced sudden bilateral hearing loss together with infrequent but severe spinning vertigo attacks. I sought help from my PCP who recommended a specialist who recommended another specialist at MEEI in Boston. The original diagnosis was bilateral Meniere's syndrome, Meniere's being, as you know, an idiopathic diagnosis. My hearing loss continued in a step-wise, episodic fashion over the years until now, where my hearing loss is approaching cochlear implant territory (85-95db with < 40% speech recognition). The last diagnosis I got from MEEI (about 5 years ago) was that I had "some sort of degenerative hearing loss of unknown origin". No one ever suggested sleep apnea as a possible cause. I have always been in generally good health and there is no history of hearing loss in my family.
Do you think that long-term oxygen deprivation from sleep apnea could have been a cause of my hearing loss?
Richard,
This is a good explanation based on this paper and all the other research studies. However, it's not mainstream thinking (yet). It's also difficult to prove. If you happen to get the test that the study participants got, it may confirm this finding.
Richard C. Davis said:I was just recently diagnosed with sleep apnea and I just got my machine today. My sleep tests indicated, among other things, that my blood oxygen level would drop as low as 58%.
About 12 to 13 years ago I experienced sudden bilateral hearing loss together with infrequent but severe spinning vertigo attacks. I sought help from my PCP who recommended a specialist who recommended another specialist at MEEI in Boston. The original diagnosis was bilateral Meniere's syndrome, Meniere's being, as you know, an idiopathic diagnosis. My hearing loss continued in a step-wise, episodic fashion over the years until now, where my hearing loss is approaching cochlear implant territory (85-95db with < 40% speech recognition). The last diagnosis I got from MEEI (about 5 years ago) was that I had "some sort of degenerative hearing loss of unknown origin". No one ever suggested sleep apnea as a possible cause. I have always been in generally good health and there is no history of hearing loss in my family.
Do you think that long-term oxygen deprivation from sleep apnea could have been a cause of my hearing loss?
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