HUBUNGAN HIPERTENSI DENGAN GANGGUAN PENDENGARAN SENSORINEURAL PADA PASIEN RAWAT JALAN DI POLIKLINIK TELINGA HIDUNG TENGGOROKAN DI RSUD PROVINSI NTB TAHUN 2014-2017
Abstract
Hearing loss may be conductive hearing loss and sensorineural hearing loss. All cases of hearing loss, 90% are sensorineural hearing loss. The most risk of sensorineural hearing loss are the intensity of noise, age, and history of hypertension disease. Studies show that hypertension causes sensorineural hearing loss. this study is an analytical observational with cross sectional study plan. The sample was covering 96 respondents, consisting of 48 sensorineural hearing loss patients and 48 non-sensorineural hearing loss patients.
The study was done using patient medical records at the Ear-Nose-Throat Policlinic of NTB province hospital from 2014 to 2017. Data analysis was performed by contingency coefficient corellation test. The analysis result was significant value p = 0,000 < p (0,05) which showed their significance or correlation of the conducted study. There is a significant correlation between hypertension and sensorineural hearing loss.
All articles published in Jurnal Kedokteran: Media Informasi Ilmu Kedokteran dan Kesehatan are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International license, this license allows anyone to compose, improve, and create derivative works for non-commercial purposes. in Jurnal Kedokteran: Media Informasi Ilmu Kedokteran dan Kesehatan is recognized as the original publisher, and a link to the license is provided. Changes must also be indicated.
Copyright and publishing rights to articles are held by their respective authors, without limitation. However, a non-exclusive license is granted to Jurnal Kedokteran: Media Informasi Ilmu Kedokteran dan Kesehatan to publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher.
By submitting to Jurnal Kedokteran: Media Informasi Ilmu Kedokteran dan Kesehatan the authors acknowledge that any third party may use their articles to the extent permitted by the CC BY -NC 4.0 license, if their articles are published.