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Journal Article

Citation

Sharoni Z, Shupak A, Spitzer O, Nachum Z, Gadoth N. Ann. Otol. Rhinol. Laryngol. 2001; 110(2): 127-131.

Affiliation

Israel Naval Medical Institute, Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps, and the Department of Otolaryngology--Head and Neck Surgery, Carmel Medical Center, Haifa.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Annals Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11219519

Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to investigate possible inner ear changes related to professional diving, by the documentation of auditory and vestibular function in 13 asymptomatic professional divers and 12 nondiver controls. A higher average pure tone hearing threshold, although of no clinical significance, was found in the study group (8.53 +/- 4.85 versus 6.67 +/- 3.54 dB hearing level, p = .04). In the vestibular evaluation, the smooth harmonic acceleration test phase leads for 0.01, 0.02, and 0.04 Hz were significantly lower in the divers (0.01 Hz, 38.46 degrees +/- 7.15 degrees versus 45.83 degrees +/- 9.02 degrees, p = .02; 0.02 Hz, 21.08 degrees +/- 5.19 +/- versus 25.17 degrees +/- 5.78 degrees, p = .05: 0.04 Hz, 12.38 degrees +/- 3.69 degrees versus 14.25 degrees +/- 3.14 degrees, p = .05). We suggest that the lower smooth harmonic acceleration phase values found in the professional divers, reflecting longer vestibulo-ocular reflex primary time constants and enhancement of the velocity storage mechanism, are the result of a habituation process that augments the low-frequency response of the canal-ocular system.


Language: en

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