Suppr超能文献

物质滥用对听觉和前庭功能的影响:系统评价。

The Effects of Substance Misuse on Auditory and Vestibular Function: A Systematic Review.

机构信息

Department of Surgery, Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA.

Department of Special Education and Communication Disorders, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, USA.

出版信息

Ear Hear. 2024;45(2):276-296. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000001425. Epub 2023 Oct 3.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Chronic substance misuse is an ongoing and significant public health concern. Among a myriad of health complications that can occur, substance misuse potentially causes ototoxic effects. Case reports, retrospective chart data, and a few cohort studies suggest that certain prescription opioids and illicit drugs can have either temporary or permanent effects on auditory and/or vestibular function. Given the steady rise of people with a substance-use disorder (SUD), it is of growing importance that audiologists and otolaryngologists have an insight into the potential ototoxic effects of substance misuse.

OBJECTIVES

A systematic review was conducted to (1) synthesize the literature on the illicit drugs, prescription opioids, and alcohol misuse on the auditory and vestibular systems, (2) highlight common hearing and vestibular impairments for each substance class, and (3) discuss the limitations of the literature, the potential mechanisms, and clinical implications for clinicians who may encounter patients with hearing or vestibular loss related to substance misuse, and describe opportunities for further study.

DESIGN

Systematic searches were performed via PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar, and the final updated search was conducted through March 30, 2022. Inclusion criteria included peer-reviewed articles, regardless of study design, from inception until the present that included adults with chronic substance misuse and hearing and/or vestibular complaints. Articles that focused on the acute effects of substances in healthy people, ototoxicity from already known ototoxic medications, the relationship between hearing loss and development of a SUD, articles not available in English, animal work, and duplicates were excluded. Information on the population (adults), outcomes (hearing and/or vestibular data results), and study design (e.g., case report, cohort) were extracted. A meta-analysis could not be performed because more than 60% of the studies were single-case reports or small cohort.

RESULTS

The full text of 67 studies that met the eligibility criteria were selected for the review. Overall, 21 studies reported associations between HL/VL related to illicit drug misuse, 28 studies reported HL/VL from prescription opioids, and 20 studies reported HL/VL related to chronic alcohol misuse (2 studies spanned more than one category). Synthesis of the findings suggested that the misuse and/or overdose of amphetamines and cocaine was associated with sudden, bilateral, and temporary HL, whereas HL from the combination of a stimulant and an opioid often presented with greater HL in the mid-frequency range. Reports of temporary vertigo or imbalance were mainly associated with illicit drugs. HL associated with misuse of prescription opioids was typically sudden or rapidly progressive, bilateral, moderately severe to profound, and in almost all cases permanent. The misuse of prescription opioids occasionally resulted in peripheral VL, especially when the opioid misuse was long term. Chronic alcohol misuse tended to associate with high-frequency sudden or progressive sensorineural hearing loss, or retrocochlear dysfunction, and a high occurrence of central vestibular dysfunction and imbalance.

CONCLUSIONS

Overall, chronic substance misuse associates with potential ototoxic effects, resulting in temporary or permanent hearing and/or vestibular dysfunction. However, there are notable limitations to the evidence from the extant literature including a lack of objective test measures used to describe hearing or vestibular effects associated with substance misuse, small study sample sizes, reliance on case studies, lack of controlling for confounders related to health, age, sex, and other substance-use factors. Future large-scale studies with prospective study designs are needed to further ascertain the role and risk factors of substance misuse on auditory and vestibular function and to further clinical management practices.

摘要

背景

慢性物质滥用是一个持续存在且严重的公共卫生问题。在可能发生的众多健康并发症中,物质滥用可能会导致耳毒性作用。病例报告、回顾性图表数据和一些队列研究表明,某些处方类阿片类药物和非法药物可能对听觉和/或前庭功能产生暂时或永久性影响。鉴于物质使用障碍(SUD)患者数量的稳步上升,越来越重要的是,听力学家和耳鼻喉科医生需要了解物质滥用的潜在耳毒性作用。

目的

进行了一项系统评价,以(1)综合关于非法药物、处方类阿片类药物和酒精滥用对听觉和前庭系统的文献,(2)突出每种类别物质常见的听力和前庭损伤,(3)讨论文献的局限性、潜在机制以及对可能遇到与物质滥用相关听力或前庭损失的患者的临床医生的临床意义,并描述进一步研究的机会。

设计

通过 PubMed、Scopus 和 Google Scholar 进行系统搜索,最后一次更新搜索于 2022 年 3 月 30 日进行。纳入标准包括无论研究设计如何,从开始到现在,包含慢性物质滥用和听力和/或前庭投诉的成年人的同行评审文章。专注于健康人急性物质作用、已知耳毒性药物的耳毒性、听力损失与 SUD 发展之间关系、英文以外的文章、动物研究和重复的文章被排除在外。提取了关于人群(成年人)、结果(听力和/或前庭数据结果)和研究设计(例如病例报告、队列)的信息。由于超过 60%的研究是单病例报告或小队列,因此无法进行荟萃分析。

结果

符合入选标准的 67 篇全文研究被选入综述。总体而言,21 项研究报告了与非法药物滥用相关的 HL/VL 之间的关联,28 项研究报告了处方类阿片类药物引起的 HL/VL,20 项研究报告了与慢性酒精滥用相关的 HL/VL(2 项研究跨越了多个类别)。研究结果的综合表明,安非他命和可卡因的滥用和/或过量与突发性、双侧和暂时性 HL 有关,而兴奋剂和阿片类药物联合使用引起的 HL 通常在中频范围内表现出更大的 HL。与非法药物相关的短暂眩晕或平衡障碍主要与非法药物有关。与处方类阿片类药物滥用相关的 HL 通常是突发性或快速进展性的、双侧的、中度至重度至重度的,且几乎所有病例都是永久性的。处方类阿片类药物的滥用偶尔会导致外周性 VL,尤其是当阿片类药物滥用时间较长时。慢性酒精滥用往往与高频突发性或进行性感音神经性听力损失或迷路后功能障碍、中央前庭功能障碍和失衡发生率较高有关。

结论

总体而言,慢性物质滥用与潜在的耳毒性作用有关,导致暂时性或永久性听力和/或前庭功能障碍。然而,现有文献中的证据存在明显的局限性,包括缺乏用于描述与物质滥用相关的听力或前庭影响的客观测试措施、研究样本量小、依赖于病例研究、缺乏与健康、年龄、性别和其他物质使用因素相关的混杂因素控制。需要进行大规模的未来研究,采用前瞻性研究设计,以进一步确定物质滥用对听觉和前庭功能的作用和风险因素,并进一步确定临床管理实践。

相似文献

10
Platinum-induced hearing loss after treatment for childhood cancer.儿童癌症治疗后铂诱导的听力损失。
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Aug 3;2016(8):CD010181. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010181.pub2.

本文引用的文献

4
Hearing status in patients with overdose of illicit drugs.非法药物过量患者的听力状况。
Med J Islam Repub Iran. 2021 May 1;35:56. doi: 10.47176/mjiri.35.56. eCollection 2021.

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验