Matthew L. Carlson, MD
Daniel Jethanamest, MD
It is with great pleasure we present to you this special issue in Journal of Neurological Surgery Part B: Skull Base, entitled “Hearing Preservation and Auditory Rehabilitation in Skull Base Surgery.”
The management of benign lateral skull base tumors has evolved considerably over the
last several decades. Driven by advances in microsurgical technique and low-dose highly
conformal radiation, combined with an enhanced understanding of the natural history
of tumor growth, the modern management of lateral skull base disease currently prioritizes
function preservation over radical tumor removal. Under this paradigm, cranial nerve
preservation is achieved in the majority of patients. Notwithstanding considerable
advances in the field, durable preservation of functional hearing in patients with
vestibular schwannoma and other lateral skull base tumors remains elusive.
This special issue focuses on hearing-related topics relevant to vestibular schwannoma,
intralabyrinthine schwannoma, jugular parganglioma, and sequelae of temporal bone
radiation and systemic chemotherapy. Leaders and innovators in the field provide focused
reviews on audiologic testing and hearing outcome reporting, tinnitus management,
surgical, and nonsurgical techniques for rehabilitation of unilateral conductive hearing
loss, single-sided deafness, bilateral profound hearing loss, and hearing preservation
outcomes according to disease and management. We wish to sincerely thank all of our
expert contributors for their outstanding submissions and hard work which was essential
to complete this task. We also wish to thank Journal Editors Dennis Kraus M.D. and
Michael Link M.D. for the opportunity to be guest editors for this stimulating and
challenging topic.