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Clinical Assessment of Hearing Impairment
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To the Editor: In their Rational Clinical Examination article on hearing impairment, Dr Bagai and colleagues1 made no explicit recommendation to visualize the ear canal and tympanic membrane in either the discussion of tests or in the Case Resolution. The recommended management of Case 1 states that once a patient reports hearing loss "no further bedside diagnostic testing is required," and that the patient should be sent for formal audiological testing, implying that the physician does not need to look in the ear. While there is passing mention that the audioscope can be used to visualize the tympanic membrane, an examination with a regular otoscope can reveal simple problems like cerumen impaction as a cause of reversible hearing loss. It may well be stating the obvious to include this in the article and the algorithm, but the beauty of this series of articles is that it reexamines what we think . . . [Full Text of this Article]
David L. Gaspar, MD
david.gaspar@uchsc.edu Department of Family Medicine University of Colorado Denver
RELATED LETTERS
Clinical Assessment of Hearing Impairment
Stephen M. Kieran and John E. Fenton
JAMA. 2007;297(7):695.
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Clinical Assessment of Hearing ImpairmentReply
Akshay Bagai, Paaladinesh Thavendiranathan, and Allan S. Detsky
JAMA. 2007;297(7):695-696.
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RELATED ARTICLE
Does This Patient Have Hearing Impairment?
Akshay Bagai, Paaladinesh Thavendiranathan, and Allan S. Detsky
JAMA. 2006;295(4):416-428.
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