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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Background: Stroke is the leading cause of cortical deafness (CD), the most severe form
of central hearing impairment. CD remains poorly characterized and perhaps underdiagnosed. We
perform a systematic review to describe the clinical and radiological features of stroke-associated
CD. Methods: PubMed and the Web of Science databases were used to identify relevant publications
up to 30 June 2021 using the MeSH terms: “deafness” and “stroke”, or “hearing loss” and “stroke”
or “auditory agnosia” and “stroke”. Results: We found 46 cases, caused by bilateral lesions within
the central auditory pathway, mostly located within or surrounding the superior temporal lobe gyri
and/or the Heschl’s gyri (30/81%). In five (13.51%) patients, CD was caused by the subcortical
hemispheric and in two (0.05%) in brainstem lesions. Sensorineural hearing loss was universal.
Occasionally, a misdiagnosis by peripheral or psychiatric disorders occurred. A few (20%) had
clinical improvement, with a regained oral conversation or evolution to pure word deafness (36.6%).
A persistent inability of oral communication occurred in 43.3%. A full recovery of conversation was
restricted to patients with subcortical lesions. Conclusions: Stroke-associated CD is rare, severe and
results from combinations of cortical and subcortical lesions within the central auditory pathway.
The recovery of functional hearing occurs, essentially, when caused by subcortical lesions.
Description
Keywords
Cortical deafness Stroke Auditory agnosia AVC MFR