Author: Daher, Ghazal S.; Nassiri, Ashley M.; Vanichkachorn, Greg; Carlson, Matthew L.; Neff, Brian A.; Driscoll, Colin L.W.
Title: New onset tinnitus in the absence of hearing changes following COVID-19 infection Cord-id: uhjubcio Document date: 2021_9_10
ID: uhjubcio
Snippet: BACKGROUND: A variety of neurosensory symptoms including tinnitus have been associated with COVID-19 infection. While most cases of tinnitus are associated with hearing loss, here we report a case of severe tinnitus following COVID-19 infection with normal thresholds through 8000 Hz. CASE REPORT: A 49-year-old male presented with new onset severe tinnitus following COVID-19 infection. Tinnitus was bilateral, constant and nonpulsatile. Audiometric evaluation revealed normal threshold through 8000
Document: BACKGROUND: A variety of neurosensory symptoms including tinnitus have been associated with COVID-19 infection. While most cases of tinnitus are associated with hearing loss, here we report a case of severe tinnitus following COVID-19 infection with normal thresholds through 8000 Hz. CASE REPORT: A 49-year-old male presented with new onset severe tinnitus following COVID-19 infection. Tinnitus was bilateral, constant and nonpulsatile. Audiometric evaluation revealed normal threshold through 8000 Hz, with mild hearing loss at 16,000 Hz. Conservative measures including masking strategies failed to mitigate symptoms. A trial of gabapentin 300 mg twice per day improved tinnitus with no notable side effects. CONCLUSION: This patient may represent a subpopulation of patients who suffer from severe tinnitus following COVID-19 infection in the setting of largely normal hearing. The pathophysiology may be distinct from the more common hearing loss associated tinnitus and perhaps neuromodulators may play a larger role in mitigating tinnitus in this patient subset.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date