- ototoxic hearing loss
- hearing loss caused by ingestion of toxic substances; called also toxic h. l.
Medical dictionary. 2011.
Medical dictionary. 2011.
Sensorineural hearing loss — Classification and external resources Cross section of the cochlea. ICD 10 H … Wikipedia
toxic hearing loss — ototoxic h. l … Medical dictionary
Hearing impairment — See also: Deaf culture for the social movement.. Deaf and/or hard of hearing Classification and external resources The International Symbol for Deafness … Wikipedia
Post-lingual hearing impairment — is a hearing impairment where hearing loss is adventitious and develops due to disease or trauma after the acquisition of speech and language, usually after the age of six.Post lingual hearing impairments are far more common than prelingual… … Wikipedia
ototoxicity — The property of being injurious to the ear. [oto + G. toxikon, poison] familial aminoglycoside o. inherited susceptibility to sensory hearing loss upon administration of aminoglycoside antibiotics due to a mutation in the m … Medical dictionary
Ototoxicity — Classification and external resources ICD 10 H91.0 DiseasesDB 2874 … Wikipedia
Tinnitus — Infobox Disease Name = Tinnitus Caption = DiseasesDB = 27662 ICD10 = ICD10|H|93|1|h|90 ICD9 = ICD9|388.3 ICDO = OMIM = MedlinePlus = 003043 eMedicineSubj = ent eMedicineTopic = 235 MeshID = D014012Tinnitus (pronEng|tɪˈnaɪtəs or IPA|/ˈtɪnɪtəs/,… … Wikipedia
ear disease — ▪ human Introduction any of the diseases or disorders that affect the human ear and hearing. Impaired hearing (deafness) is, with rare exception, the result of disease or abnormality of the outer, middle, or inner ear. Serious… … Universalium
Balance disorder — Classification and external resources ICD 10 H81, R42 ICD 9 780.4 A balance disorder i … Wikipedia
Pure tone audiometry — (PTA) is the key hearing test used to identify hearing threshold levels of an individual, enabling determination of the degree, type and configuration of a hearing loss. Thus, providing the basis for diagnosis and management. PTA is a subjective … Wikipedia