Can Sudden Hearing Loss Predict Future Stroke Risk? Bloomfield Hills MI

If you experience a sudden loss of hearing, it's important to see your doctor and get tested. Hearing loss can have many causes, including neurological problems, circulatory-system malfunctions, or trauma to the ear.

Kris Warszawski MD
(734) 522-9800
2011 Middlebelt Rd
Garden City, MI
John Quenith Dickey Jr, DO
248-666-5200
5151 Franklin Rd
Bloomfield, MI
Randall Lee Reher, MD
248-332-9432
43097 Woodward Ave Ste 202
Bloomfield Hills, MI
Shahrokh Mansoori
(248) 858-7022
43700 Woodward
Bloomfield Hills, MI
Michele DeGregorio
(248) 333-1170
43344 Woodward Ave
Bloomfield Hills, MI
Joseph Naoum, MD
(586) 465-1326
133 S Main St
Mount Clemens, MI
Hanna M El Khouri, MD
248-335-8500
1725 S Woodward Ste 105
Bloomfield Hills, MI
Russell T Steinman
(248) 333-1170
43344 Woodward Ave
Bloomfield Hills, MI
John Clayton Patterson, MD
248-332-3338
754 Upper Scotsborough Way
Bloomfield Hills, MI
Moufid Mitri, MD, FACC
248-335-5250
3350 Franklin Rd
Bloomfield Hills, MI
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Can Sudden Hearing Loss Predict Future Stroke Risk?

If you suddenly have trouble hearing in one or both ears, are you destined to suffer a stroke at some point in your future? That is the question a group of researchers in Taiwan are pondering after examining follow-up data on more than 1,400 people hospitalized for acute hearing loss. Records show that up to two years after being admitted for their sudden hearing loss, they were one and a half times likelier to have suffered a stroke than was a control group of patients who had been admitted for appendectomies.

The researchers, based at Taipei Medical University School of Health Care Administration, are not yet ready to declare a definitive link between hearing loss and stroke. There are too many variables, including the possibility of unreliable diagnostic codes, uncertainty over the severity of the hearing loss and the extent of hearing recovery, and patients' own personal histories, including smoking, body mass, and previous cardiovascular problems, all of which can up stroke risk. But there does appear to be a connection, however tentative, between the two medical conditions.

If you experience a sudden loss of hearing, it's important to see your doctor and get tested. Hearing loss can have many causes, including neurological problems, circulatory-system malfunctions, or trauma to the ear. Make sure you get a thorough neurological exam and blood workup to learn whether you're at risk of stroke in the near future. And be aware of the symptoms of stroke, which tend to come on suddenly. They include:..

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