Ottaviani Francesco, Dozio Nicoletta, Neglia Cesare B, Riccio Stefano, Scavini Marina
IV Cattedra di Otorinolaringoiatria, Università degli Studi, Via Stampa 11, 20081 Abbiategrasso, Milan, Italy.
J Diabetes Complications. 2002 Sep-Oct;16(5):338-43. doi: 10.1016/s1056-8727(01)00224-0.
In order to evaluate cochlear function in Type 1 diabetes mellitus, this study analyses otoacoustic emissions (OAEs) on normal hearing subjects with diabetes and on controls. Patients with Type 1 diabetes (n=60), with a mean age of 31+/-6.23 years, mean disease duration of 17.5+/-8.9 years, and mean HbA1c of 8.1+/-1.8%, of whom 43% had signs of retinopathy and 28% had clinical signs of neuropathy, were studied. All patients underwent an OAE analysis and brainstem-evoked potentials. Fifty-eight normal volunteers were used as controls for the OAE analysis. Seventeen patients (28.3%) had no OAEs in at least one ear and 10% in both ears. The mean intensity of the response was lower in diabetic subjects [7.1+/-4.4 vs. 10.9+/-9.3 dB SPL (sound pressure level)] than in controls. The cochlear impairment was over 5 dB for the 1-kHz frequency, which is the critical level for speech understanding. These findings suggest that cochleopathy can be detected in a relatively high proportion of subjects with Type 1 diabetes in spite of a normal audiometric hearing threshold.