Abstract
The Committee on Hearing and Equilibrium of the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery proposed guidelines to provide more uniformity in reporting hearing results after middle ear surgery. One of the proposals was to include the hearing thresholds at 0.5, 1, 2, and 3 kHz in a 4-frequency pure-tone average (PTA) and to use postoperative bone-conduction (BC) levels rather than preoperative BC levels in describing postoperative air-bone gaps (ABGs). The hearing results of 451 stapes operations were evaluated to analyze to what extent the choice of different audiologic criteria affects success rates. It appeared that choice of PTA significantly affects postoperative gain in air-conduction thresholds and ABG levels. If one takes the improvements in speech-reception thresholds as the gold standard, the gain in air-conduction correlates best with a gain in speech-reception threshold if a higher frequency, such as 3 or 4 kHz, is included in a 4-frequency PTA. Also, choice of preoperative or postoperative BC in computing postoperative ABGs had a significant effect on the mean postoperative ABG levels, showing more favorable results with the use of preoperative BC thresholds. (Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 2001; 124:76–83.)
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