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Conductive hearing loss
Ear-anatomy-text-small.png
ICD-11
ICD-10 H900-H902
ICD-9 389.0
OMIM [1]
DiseasesDB 3043
MedlinePlus [2]
eMedicine /
MeSH {{{MeshNumber}}}

Conductive hearing loss is a failure in the efficient conduction of sound waves through the outer ear, tympanic membrane (eardrum) or middle ears (ossicles). This type of hearing loss may occur in conjunction with sensorineural hearing loss or alone.

Causes of conductive hearing loss[]

External ear[]

Common[]

  • Cerumen (earwax)
  • Otitis externa

Uncommon[]

  • Foreign body in the external auditory canal
  • Exostoses
  • Tumour of the of canal
  • Congenital atresia

Middle ear[]

Common[]

Uncommon[]

  • Cholesteatoma
  • Otosclerosis
  • Middle ear tumour
  • Temporal bone trauma

Differentiating conductive and sensorineuronal hearing loss[]

When a Weber test is carried out, sound localizes to the ear affected by the conductive loss. A Rinne test, in which air conduction is normally greater than bone conduction, is usually negative (abnormal), and shows higher greater bone conduction than air conduction.

Table 1. A table comparing sensorineural hearing loss to conductive

Criteria Sensorineural hearing loss Conductive hearing loss
Anatomical Site Inner ear, cranial nerve VIII, or central processing centers Middle ear (ossicular chain), tympanic membrane, or external ear
Weber Test Sound localizes to normal ear Sound localizes to affected ear (ear with conductive loss)
Rinne Test Positive Rinne; Air conduction > Bone conduction (both air and bone conduction are decreased equally, but the difference between them is unchanged). Negative Rinne; Bone Conduction > Air Conduction (Bone/Air Gap)


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