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The Ototoxic Potential of Cobalt From Metal-on-Metal Hip Implants: Objective Auditory and Vestibular Outcome

Authors :
Rebecca Lim
Laura Leyssens
Hannah Keppler
Catherine Van Der Straeten
Ingeborg Dhooge
Koen De Smet
Romain Valette
Floris L. Wuyts
Sofie Degeest
Leen Maes
Bart Vinck
Source :
Ear and hearing
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objectives: During the past decade, the initial popularity of metal-on-metal (MoM) hip implants has shown a progressive decline due to increasingly reported implant failure and revision surgeries. Local as well as systemic toxic side effects have been associated with excessive metal ion release from implants, in which cobalt (Co) plays an important role. The rare condition of systemic cobaltism seems to manifest as a clinical syndrome with cardiac, endocrine, and neurological symptoms, including hearing loss, tinnitus, and imbalance. In most cases described in the literature, revision surgery and the subsequent drop in blood Co level led to (partial) alleviation of the symptoms, suggesting a causal relationship with Co exposure. Moreover, the ototoxic potential of Co has recently been demonstrated in animal experiments. Since its ototoxic potential in humans is merely based on anecdotal case reports, the current study aimed to prospectively and objectively examine the auditory and vestibular function in patients implanted with a MoM hip prosthesis. Design: Twenty patients (15 males and 5 females, aged between 33 and 65 years) implanted with a primary MoM hip prosthesis were matched for age, gender, and noise exposure to 20 non-implanted control subjects. Each participant was subjected to an extensive auditory (conventional and high-frequency pure tone audiometry, transient evoked and distortion product otoacoustic emissions [TEOAEs and DPOAEs], auditory brainstem responses [ABR]) and vestibular test battery (cervical and ocular vestibular evoked myogenic potentials [cVEMPs and oVEMPs], rotatory test, caloric test, video head impulse test [vHIT]), supplemented with a blood sample collection to determine the plasma Co concentration. Results: The median [interquartile range] plasma Co concentration was 1.40 [0.70, 6.30] mu g/L in the MoM patient group and 0.19 [0.09, 0.34] mu g/L in the control group. Within the auditory test battery, a clear trend was observed toward higher audiometric thresholds (11.2 to 16kHz), lower DPOAE (between 4 and 8kHz), and total TEOAE (1 to 4kHz) amplitudes, and a higher interaural latency difference for wave V of the ABR in the patient versus control group (0.01

Details

ISSN :
15384667 and 01960202
Volume :
41
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ear and hearing
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b9ad66a5c4105c19e1ad4cffbe58771a