PHARMACOLOGICAL/OTOTOXICITY
- Medication use consistently has been associated with falls.1
- Polypharmacy (taking four or more medications and/or use of psychotropic medications) significantly increases fall risk about 70%.2
- Patients undergoing treatment with ototoxic medications often do not realize that they have a balance problem until they get out of their hospital bed and try to ambulate.3
- Reducing or modifying medication use has been an important component in multifactoral, community-based studies related to the reduction of fall risk.4, 5
- Acquired bilateral vestibular impairment is frequently the result of aminoglycoside-induced toxicity.3
- Patients with bilateral vestibular loss due to aminoglycoside antibiotics have demonstrated problems related to vestibulo-ocular and vestibulo-spinal dysfunction.6
- Gentamicin and streptomycin are commonly used aminoglycoside antibiotics that are also vestibulotoxins.7
- Clinical prevalence of gentamicin ototoxicity is estimated at 2-3%.8
- In the diabetic population, resultant tissue and bone infections (such as osteomyelitis) are treated with aminoglycosides; overall incidence of ototoxicity is approximately 11%.9
- In renal failure/dialysis patients receiving aminoglycosides for peritonitis, incidence of ototoxicity is estimated at 20%.7
References:
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