The gold standard of hearing evaluation includes pure tone
audiometry with speech testing, as well as impedance (middle ear
pressure) testing
1. Diagnosing Conductive vs. Sensorineural Hearing Loss
A. History
• Conductive: Ear pain, fullness, drainage, history of recurrent
infections, trauma, cerumen impaction, surgery.
• Sensorineural (SNHL): Gradual hearing loss (presbycusis), loud
noise exposure, tinnitus, vertigo, ototoxic medications, sudden
onset without infection.
B. Exam
• Otoscopy:
o Conductive → cerumen, foreign body, effusion, perforated
TM, cholesteatoma.
o SNHL → usually normal ear exam.
C. Bedside Tests
• Weber test (tuning fork, mid-forehead):
o Conductive → lateralizes to affected ear.
o SNHL → lateralizes to unaffected ear.
• Rinne test (tuning fork at mastoid vs. ear canal):
o Conductive → bone > air conduction in affected ear.
o SNHL → air > bone (normal pattern) but decreased overall
hearing.
D. Formal Audiometry (Gold Standard)
• Conductive: Air-bone gap (bone conduction better than air).
• SNHL: Both air and bone reduced, no gap.
E. Additional Testing
, • Imaging (CT/MRI):
o Conductive → if cholesteatoma, trauma, malformation.
o SNHL → unilateral/asymmetric → MRI to rule out acoustic
neuroma.
• Lab work: If autoimmune or infectious cause suspected.
🔹 2. Management
A. Conductive Hearing Loss
Causes & Treatment:
• Cerumen impaction / foreign body → removal.
• Otitis externa / media → topical or systemic antibiotics.
• Otitis media with effusion → often observation;
myringotomy/tympanostomy tubes if persistent.
• Tympanic membrane perforation → often heals spontaneously;
surgery if chronic.
• Cholesteatoma → surgical excision.
• Otosclerosis → stapedectomy surgery or hearing aids.
B. Sensorineural Hearing Loss (SNHL)
Causes & Treatment:
• Presbycusis (age-related) → hearing aids, communication
strategies.
• Noise-induced hearing loss → prevention, hearing aids.
• Ototoxicity (aminoglycosides, cisplatin, loop diuretics,
salicylates) → stop offending drug, audiology follow-up.
• Sudden SNHL (ENT emergency) → high-dose corticosteroids (oral or
intratympanic) within 72 hours; urgent ENT referral.
• Ménière’s disease → salt restriction, diuretics, vestibular
suppressants; ENT referral for refractory cases.