Al. Woolley et al., Risk factors for hearing loss from meningitis in children - The Children'sHospital experience, ARCH OTOLAR, 125(5), 1999, pp. 509-514
Objectives: To identify statistically significant risk factors for hearing
loss in children with meningitis, determine the overall incidence of hearin
g loss in a large group of children with confirmed meningitis, and quantify
the percentage of children with progressive or fluctuating hearing loss af
ter meningitis.
Design: Retrospective analysis.
Patients and Other Participants: Four hundred thirty-two children admitted
to the Children's Hospital, Birmingham, Ala, from January 1, 1985, to Decem
ber 31, 1995, with the diagnosis of meningitis.
Results: Of 432 children with meningitis, 59 (13.7%) had the development of
hearing loss. Of these 59 children, 46 (78.0%) had stable sensorineural he
aring loss and 13 (22.0%) had either progressive or fluctuating hearing los
s. Of the variables examined using multiple logistic regression backward-el
imination modeling, only 5 appeared to be significantly associated with the
development of hearing loss: computed tomographic scan evidence of increas
ed intracranial pressure (estimated odds ratio [OR] = 2.3), male sex (OR =
1.9), the common logarithm of glucose levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (OR
= 0.58), Streptococcus pneumoniae as the causative organism (OR = 2.1), an
d the presence of nuchal rigidity (OR = 1.9). In the children with progress
ive hearing loss, the time for progression varied from 3 months to 4 years
before hearing stabilized.
Conclusions: In this study of children diagnosed as having meningitis, hear
ing loss developed in 59 (13.7%). Forty-six (78.0%) of these children with
hearing loss had stable auditory thresholds over time, and 13 (22.0%) exhib
ited deterioration or fluctuation of acuity over time. Evidence of increase
d intracranial pressure by computed tomographic scan, male sex, low glucose
levels in the patients' cerebrospinal fluid, S pneumoniae as the causative
organism, and the presence of nuchal rigidity appear to be significant pre
dictors for future hearing loss.