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There appears to be a hereditary [[predisposition]] to ototoxic reactions.
There appears to be a hereditary [[predisposition]] to ototoxic reactions.

Doctor Beware: The drug Neomycin Sulfate has been known to cause ototoxicity in infants who are treated for Clostridium Difficile when over-dosed. One should take care to have the oral suspension made up at 125mg/5ml or less for an infant under one year of age at a dose of 3ml given orally three time daily on eight hour intervals only over a FIVE day period and no more. Also, it is rather important the weight of the child should be taken into account as to the exact oral dosages given....


==Symptoms==
==Symptoms==

Revision as of 07:53, 31 December 2008

Ototoxicity
SpecialtyOtorhinolaryngology, audiologist Edit this on Wikidata

Ototoxicity is damage of the ear (oto), specifically the cochlea or auditory nerve and sometimes the vestibulum, by a toxin (often medication).

Causes

A number of drugs have been associated with damage to the cochlea. The best known are aminoglycoside antibiotics, aspirin, nicotine, some chemotherapy agents (cisplatin, carboplatin, vincristine) and some loop diuretics such as furosemide.

Erythromycin and some other macrolide antibiotics can induce temporary deafness, which resolves upon withdrawal of the drug.

Other chemicals such as toluene, mercury and carbon monoxide are also known ototoxic chemicals.

There appears to be a hereditary predisposition to ototoxic reactions.

Symptoms

Symptoms include partial or profound hearing loss, vertigo, and tinnitus.

Treatment

No specific treatment is available, but immediate withdrawal of the drug may be warranted in cases where the consequences of doing so are less severe than the consequences of the ototoxicity.

See also

  • "Ototoxic drugs". GPnotebook.
  • Ototoxic Medications
  • Articles on Ototoxic Drugs by Neil Bauman, Ph.D.