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Original Articles

Peripheral and central auditory function in adults with epilepsy and treated with carbamazepine

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Abstract

Purpose of the study: Epilepsy is a chronic medical disease in one third of patients. Chronic epilepsy and its antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) therapy are commonly associated with comorbid adverse somatic conditions. This study aimed to evaluate auditory function in patients with idiopathic epilepsy and on treatment with carbamazepine (CBZ).

Methods: This is a cross-sectional case-control study. It included 50 patients with idiopathic epilepsy (mean age = 34.56 ± 7.11 and duration of illness = 17.84 ± 7.21years) and 40 healthy subjects. Hearing was evaluated using pure tone audiometry and brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) analyses.

Results: Mild bilateral hearing impairment and abnormal acoustic reflex (but normal tympanometry) were reported in more than one third of patients. Compared to controls, BAEPs of patients had prolonged waves I, III, V latencies and I–III, III–V and I–V interpeak latencies (IPLs) particularly at high repetition frequencies. Significant correlations were identified between CBZ dose, serum level and duration of treatment with waves I, III and V and I–III, III–V and I–V latencies at high repetition frequencies.

Conclusions: Long-term treatment with CBZ may result in delayed auditory conduction within the peripheral pathways and brainstem. This should be taken into account during drug selection and monitoring of patients with epilepsy.

Disclosure statement

We declare that this work has no conflict of interests. There is no involvement of sponsor for this work design, data collection, analysis, interpretation, drafting, nor the decision to submit this paper for publication. All are authors’ responsibility.

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