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Volume 132, Issue 5, Pages 722-726 (May 2005)


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Trends in the diagnosis and the management of meniere’s disease: Results of a survey

Harold H. Kim, MDabcCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Richard J. Wiet, MD (FACS)abc, Robert A. Battista, MD (FACS)abc

Objective

To determine the practices of the American Neurotology Society (ANS) membership in the evaluation and treatment of the Meniere’s patient.

Study design

Prospective.

Intervention

Questionnaire.

Main outcome measure

Respondents’ response to questions pertaining to the diagnostic and therapeutic practices in the management of Meniere’s disease.

Results

Three hundred members of ANS were mailed a 15-item questionnaire. Two hundred three responded, for a 67.7% response rate. For the diagnosis of Meniere’s disease, 1 in 3 practitioners relied solely on history, physical exam, and audiometry, whereas 2 in 3 relied in part on adjunctive tests, such as electrocochleography (ECOG) and electronystagmography (ENG). Two in 3 practitioners pursued retrocochlear studies on initial evaluation, with the overwhelming majority using MRI. In treating Meniere’s disease, conservative medical management was preferred. For medically recalcitrant Meniere’s disease, endolymphatic sac surgery (ESS) was the most commonly employed initial intervention (50%), followed by transtympanic gentamicin (38%). Currently, <10% routinely recommend the Meniett device. Eighty-three percent include ESS as a therapeutic option for medically recalcitrant Meniere’s disease. The vast majority continue to perform surgical labyrinthectomies and vestibular nerve sections for Meniere’s disease.

Conclusions

Meniere’s disease continues to pose a difficult diagnostic and therapeutic problem, resulting in heterogeneous approaches to both evaluation and treatment. Despite the 1995 American Academy of Otolaryngology guidelines in the diagnosis of Meniere’s disease, most clinicians rely in part on ENG or ECOG in diagnosing Meniere’s disease. Furthermore, despite the passing of 20 years since the publications claiming a purely placebo effect, ESS is the most commonly employed initial surgical treatment for Meniere’s disease.

a Wilson Ear Clinic, Portland, OR

b Chicago Otology Group, Hinsdale, Northwestern University School of Medicine, Chicago, IL

c Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, Northwestern University School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Harold H. Kim, MD, 911 NW 18th Avenue, Portland, OR 97209

 Supported by the Hinsdale Hospital Center for Hearing Restoration and Ear Research, Hinsdale, Illinois.

PII: S0194-5998(05)00086-0

doi:10.1016/j.otohns.2005.01.007


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