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Cochlear Implants International
An Interdisciplinary Journal for Implantable Hearing Devices
Volume 22, 2021 - Issue 3
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Letter to the editors

Enlarged vestibular aqueduct and cochlear anomalies: just an association or a causal relationship?

References

  • Griffith, A.J., Arts, A., Downs, C., Innis, J.W., Shepard, N.T., Sheldon, S., Gebarski, S.S. 1996. Familial large vestibular aqueduct syndrome. The Laryngoscope, 106: 960–965. doi: 10.1097/00005537-199608000-00009
  • Jackler, R.K., De La Cruz, A. 1989. The large vestibular aqueduct syndrome. The Laryngoscope, 99: 1238–1242. doi: 10.1288/00005537-198912000-00006
  • King, K.A., Choi, B.Y., Zalewski, C., et al. 2010. SLC26A4 genotype, but not cochlear radiologic structure, is correlated with hearing loss in ears with an enlarged vestibular aqueduct. The Laryngoscope, 120(2): 384–389. doi: 10.1002/lary.20722
  • Rose, J., Muskett, J.A., King, K.A., et al. 2017. Hearing loss associated with enlarged vestibular aqueduct and zero or one mutant allele of SLC26A4. The Laryngoscope, 127(7): E238–E243. doi: 10.1002/lary.26418
  • Wilson, D.F., Hodgson, R.S., Talbot, J.M. 1997. Endolymphatic sac obliteration for large vestibular aqueduct syndrome. Am J Otol., 18: 101–106.

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