Abstract
Objectives:
The vibration caused by drills used for middle ear surgery is considered one of the causes of postoperative sensorineural deafness. Seki et al reported that when drill-induced damage was created in the auditory ossicles of guinea pigs, permeability across the capillary vessels in the stria vascularis increased significantly with the duration of drill-induced vibration. The present study was undertaken to examine changes in permeability across the stria vascularis capillaries following vibration in experimental animals pretreated with steroids, with the goal of developing a method of preventing a vibration-induced increase in permeability across these capillaries.
Methods:
After an intravenous dose of hydrocortisone and horseradish peroxidase, the auditory ossicles of guinea pigs were vibrated with a drill for 60 seconds.
Results:
Intravenous steroid administration before vibration reduced the leakage of horseradish peroxidase from the stria vascularis capillaries after vibration.
Conclusions:
The findings suggested that steroids suppress the increase in permeability across the stria vascularis capillaries that results from drill-induced vibration.
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