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Vitamin
E Helps People with Sudden Hearing Loss
By Maureen Williams,
ND
Healthnotes Newswire
(October 2, 2003)People with sudden hearing loss are more likely
to recover when vitamin E is added to their treatment, according to a
new study in Otology and Neurotology (2003;24:5725).
Sudden hearing loss
is defined as a 30-decibel or greater hearing loss in at least three sequential
frequencies within three days. About 4,000 cases are reported in the United
States and about 15,000 worldwide every year. Possible causes include
infection, injury, tumor, toxicity, and neurological, circulatory, and
metabolic disorders; however, the cause of sudden hearing loss remains
unidentified in more than 85% of all cases.
Conventional treatment
can include the use of steroid medications, medications that dilate blood
vessels (vasodilators), medications that prevent blood from clotting (anti-coagulants),
and inhaled carbogen (95% oxygen and 5% carbon dioxide). There is little
published research supporting the use of any of these treatments. Recovery
occurs within two weeks in about 65% of people who receive no treatment.
A number of animal studies have suggested that oxidative damage to the
inner ear may occur as a result of inflammation and after exposure to
traumatic levels of noise and drugs that are toxic to the ear. In other
animal studies, vitamin E and other antioxidants have prevented ear damage
from drugs known to be toxic to the ear.
In the current study,
66 people hospitalized with sudden hearing loss that had come on no more
than seven days prior to entering the study were randomly assigned to
one of two groups. Both groups received the basic treatment program, which
included bed rest, steroid medication, intravenous magnesium, and inhaled
carbogen. In addition, one group received vitamin E, 600 IU two times
per day, while the other did not. Treatment was considered successful
when hearing improved by 75% or more.
Significantly more
of those receiving vitamin E had a successful response to treatment than
those not receiving vitamin E. At the time of discharge from the hospital,
treatment had been successful in 79% of those receiving vitamin E, but
only in 45% of those not receiving vitamin E. At follow-up examinations,
successful treatment was noted in 76% of those receiving vitamin E and
56% of those not receiving vitamin E.
The results of this
preliminary study demonstrate the potential beneficial effects of vitamin
E in cases of sudden hearing loss without known cause. Larger placebo-controlled
trials are warranted to confirm this benefit and to establish the amount
of vitamin E needed to see the greatest improvement. It will be important
for future studies to explore the potential benefits of other antioxidants
in treating sudden hearing loss.
Maureen Williams,
ND, received her bachelors degree from the University of Pennsylvania
and her Doctorate of Naturopathic Medicine from Bastyr University in Seattle,
WA. She has a private practice in Quechee, Vermont, and does extensive
work with traditional herbal medicine in Guatemala and Honduras. Dr. Williams
is a regular contributor to Healthnotes Newswire.
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