Isolated or combined labyrinthine, neural, and vascular damage account
for failure to preserve hearing during removal of acoustic neuromas.
However, the specific mechanisms of auditory impairment remain unclear
unless surgical maneuvers can be related to peri- and postoperative h
earing on the basis of intraoperative monitoring of auditory function.
Among the different auditory monitoring techniques, recording of coch
lear nerve action potentials (CNAPs) from the intracranial portion of
the nerve has proven particularly useful for identifying the mechanism
s of iatrogenic auditory injury. The present investigation analyzes in
tra- and postoperative auditory impairment in relation to surgical ste
ps in a group of 38 subjects with acoustic neuroma (size ranging from
5 to 24 mm) undergoing removal via a retrosigmoid approach. Coagulatio
n close to the cochlear nerve, drilling of the internal auditory canal
, and removal of the intrameatal portion of the acoustic neuroma have
proven to be the most critical surgical steps in hearing preservation.
Changes were correlated with intra- and extrameatal tumor size, the r
elationship between the internal auditory canal and vestibule, and int
ernal auditory canal enlargement, anatomic involvement of the cochlear
nerve,preoperative auditory level, and ABR and ENG test finding. Chan
ges in CNAP morphology and latency are detailed, and mechanisms of inj
ury are analyzed and discussed as a function of these variables.