My nine-year-old son noticed that he wasn't hearing well last fall when he had a cold. I had the school nurse screen him and at that time he had a 30 to 40 dB hearing loss in his left ear. We kept an eye on it and he told me it got better over the winter. He seemed fine all summer until the end of August when we were in a noisy environment and I was speaking to him from his left side. He turned his head and said 'I can't hear you can you talk into my good ear '.
So we saw the ENT last week who did the tuning fork test and it showed sensorineural hearing loss on the left. They looked at his ears with the microscope and everything looked beautiful clean and good. Today we went in for hearing testing and the audiologist looked very puzzled , And told me he is 100% deaf in his left ear. Omg he has not had a blow to the head, he has been healthy all spring and summer with no fevers,… and they are recommending an MRI.
There is so little online about rapidly acquired unilateral profound sensorineural hearing loss in a nine-year-old… I am very concerned that this could be an acoustic Neuroma. Can anyone hear share their experience of being diagnosed, or whether this is the usual onset? It was really shocking that he heard nothing, they also did the brainstem auditory evoked Test and it showed his ear is dead