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Dive into the research topics where Herman A. Jenkins is active.

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Featured researches published by Herman A. Jenkins.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2000

Unrecognized benign paroxysmal positional vertigo in elderly patients

John S. Oghalai; Spiros Manolidis; Justine L. Barth; Michael G. Stewart; Herman A. Jenkins

Balance disorders in elderly patients are associated with an increased risk of falls but are often difficult to diagnose because of comorbid chronic medical problems. We performed a cross-sectional study to determine the prevalence of unrecognized benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) and associated lifestyle sequelae in a public, inner-city geriatric population. Dizziness was found in 61% of patients, whereas balance disorders were found in 77% of patients. Nine percent were found to have unrecognized BPPV. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that the presence of a spinning sensation and the absence of a lightheadedness sensation predicted the presence of unrecognized BPPV. Patients with unrecognized BPPV were more likely to have reduced activities of daily living scores, to have sustained a fall in the previous 3 months, and to have depression. These data indicate that unrecognized BPPV is common within the elderly population and has associated morbidity. Further prospective studies are warranted.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 1987

Intracranial and intratemporal facial neuroma.

Alan F. Lipkin; Newton J. Coker; Herman A. Jenkins; Bobby R. Alford

Primary tumors of the facial nerve are relatively rare and have a variety of presenting symptoms. This article reviews 248 cases of facial neuroma in the worlds literature and adds seven cases that were managed at the Baylor College of Medicine. Facial weakness was most common symptom, with facial spasm or tics, hearing loss, and masses in the external auditory canal also being frequently seen. At surgery, the tympanic, vertical, and labyrinthine segments were the most commonly involved areas. On the basis of this review, general principles have been drawn up to help the clinician in diagnosis and management of this (at times) difficult problem.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2004

Otologics middle ear transducer™ ossicular stimulator: Performance results with varying degrees of sensorineural hearing loss

Herman A. Jenkins; John K. Niparko; William H. Slattery; J. Gail Neely; John M. Fredrickson

Objectives This study was conducted to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of the Otologics Middle Ear Transducer™ (MET™) Ossicular Stimulator and, in particular, to compare the audiologic benefits of this novel form of electromechanical stimulation with those of conventional acoustical amplification. Material and Methods A total of 282 patients were implanted with the device in Europe and the USA. Pure-tone audiometry, speech recognition and subjective assessment of benefit were tested before the surgery and 2, 3, 6 and 12 months afterwards. The US patients were fitted with a digital hearing aid for a minimum of 4 weeks prior to surgery, and the same benefit measures were performed with the digital hearing aid and their “walk-in” hearing aid. Results Group mean postoperative bone and air conduction thresholds did not change significantly from preoperative levels. Postoperative air conduction thresholds decreased slightly in some individual patients, due to the mass loading effect exerted by the transducer on the ossicles. Sufficient gain was available to reach target prescription levels for moderate to severely impaired hearing individuals. Speech and subjective assessment of patient preference indicated that patients did as well or better with the MET Ossicular Stimulator than with their “walk-in” aid or the standardized digital aid. Conclusion The capability of the MET Ossicular Stimulator to provide appropriate gain as a function of degree of hearing loss indicates that the device is a viable treatment for moderate to severe sensorineural hearing loss in adults.


American Journal of Otolaryngology | 1981

Polyarteritis nodosa as a cause of sudden deafness. A human temporal bone study.

Herman A. Jenkins; Anita Pollak; Ugo Fisch

Pathological changes in the temporal bone are described in a case of polyarteritis nodosa in a 48 year old man in whom the onset of sudden unilateral deafness and vertigo occurred seven months prior to death as one of the early manifestations of the disease. The patient had received only a seven week course of prednisolone and, earlier, a two week course of anti-inflammatory agents. Autopsy revealed involvement of the arteries supplying the kidneys, testes, and pancreas. Changes within the temporal bone were seen bilaterally and there was thickening of the mucosa of the middle ear. Inner ear involvement was mainly limited to the cochlea, the deaf ear showing more pronounced changes. These changes included loss of the organ of Corti in the hook portion of the basal coil, absence of the tectorial membrane, and atrophy of the stria vascularis. The scala tympani was obliterated by fibrosis and new bone formation. The scala media showed hydrops, and a marked decrease in the spiral ganglion cells and nerve fibers supplying this portion of the cochlea was evident. Focal changes were seen throughout the remainder of the cochlea. The vestibular structures showed no detectable pathologic changes. Small vessel arteritis was found in the dural and subacuate vessels in both temporal bones.


Neurology | 1979

Visual‐vestibular interaction and cerebellar atrophy

Robert W. Baloh; Herman A. Jenkins; Vicente Honrubia; Robert D. Yee; Clifford G. Y. Lau

The vestibular and optokinetic ocular control systems were studied in 10 patients with cerebellar atrophy and in 10 normal subjects using (1) constant velocity optokinetic stimulation, (2) sinusoidal rotation in the dark, and (3) sinusoidal rotation in the light with a surrounding fixed optokinetic drum. The gain (maximum slow component velocity/maximum head or drum velocity) of induced nystagmus was calculated from electro-oculographic recordings. Optokinetic nystagmus was abnormal in seven patients and the average optokinetic gain in the patients was significantly (p < 0.01) less than that of the normal group. Three patients with “clinically pure” cerebellar atrophy had increased vestibular responses, and one patient with clinical signs of peripheral neuropathy had decreased responses, probably due to associated vestibular nerve disease. The average vestibulo-ocular reflex gain in patients did not differ significantly from controls (p > 0.05). Three patients had normal vestibular and optokinetic responses when tested independently, but had abnormal visual-vestibular interaction. These patients probably had selective disorders of the midline cerebellar pathways that mediate visual-vestibular interaction. By studying each system, both independently and during interaction, all patients were identified as abnormal, and a more precise anatomic localization of the atrophy was obtained.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 1987

Traumatic Infratemporal Facial Nerve Injury: Management Rationale for Preservation of Function

Newton J. Coker; Katherine A. Kendall; Herman A. Jenkins; Bobby R. Alford

A retrospective review of 29 cases of infratemporal facial nerve injuries included 18 temporal bone fractures, 7 gunshot wounds, and 4 iatrogenic complications. Surgical exploration confirmed involvement of the fallopian canal in the perigeniculate region in 14 longitudinal and 3 transverse or mixed fractures of the petrous pyramid. Gunshot and iatrogenic injuries usually occurred within the tympanic and vertical segments of the facial canal and at the stylomastoid foramen. When hearing is salvageable, the middle fossa approach provides the best access to the perigeniculate region of the facial nerve. In the presence of severe sensorineural hearing loss, the transmastold-translabyrinthine approach is the most appropriate for total facial nerve exploration. Grade I to III results can be anticipated in timely decompression of lesions caused by edema or intraneural hemorrhage. Undetectable at the time of surgery, stretch and compression injuries with disruption of the endoneural tubules often lead to suboptimal results. Moderate-to-severe dysfunction (Grade IV), with slight weakness and synkinesis, is the outcome to be expected from the use of interpositional grafts.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2007

U.S. Phase I preliminary results of use of the Otologics MET Fully-Implantable Ossicular Stimulator

Herman A. Jenkins; James S. Atkins; Drew M. Horlbeck; Michael E. Hoffer; Ben J. Balough; Joseph Vincent Arigo; George Alexiades; William J. Garvis

OBJECTIVES: The safety of the Otologics Fully-Implantable MET Ossicular Stimulator was assessed in adult patients with bilateral moderate to severe sensorineural hearing loss. METHODS: Surgical implantation of the ossicular stimulator was performed. A repeated-measure, within-subjects design assessed safety and aided sound field thresholds and speech performances with the subjects own, appropriately fitted, walk-in hearing aid(s) and the Otologics Fully-Implantable MET Ossicular Stimulator. RESULTS: Twenty patients were implanted and activated as part of the Phase I clinical trial. Results demonstrated 10–20 dB of functional gain across audiometric frequencies. Pure tone averages and monaural word recognition scores were slightly better for the walk-in—aided condition, while patient benefit scales favored the postoperative implant-aided conditions. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Although monaural word scores and aided thresholds favored the walk-in—aided condition, preliminary results indicate that the Otologics MET Fully-Implantable Ossicular Stimulator is an alternative to currently available hearing aids in patients with sensorineural hearing loss.


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 1986

Obliteration of the Middle Ear and Mastoid Cleft in Subtotal Petrosectomy: Indications, Technique, and Results

Newton J. Coker; Herman A. Jenkins; Ugo Fisch

Lateral surgical approaches to the base of the skull through the temporal bone often result in a large cavity with exposed dura and vascular structures and no possibility of reconstruction of the middle ear conductive hearing mechanism. Subtotal petrosectomy with tympanomastoid obliteration provides a relatively safe and secure closure of the surgical defect in the temporal bone and eliminates the problems associated with an open mastoid cavity. Eradication of all accessible air cell tracts and mucosa in the petrous pyramid, obliteration of the eustachian tubal orifice, closure of the external auditory canal, and fat obliteration of the middle ear and mastoid clefts are essential in the procedure. Over the last 10 years this technique has been utilized in 372 base of skull procedures with a complication rate of less than 5%. Infection occurred only in those cases with draining cavities or contaminated wounds.


Otology & Neurotology | 2008

Reliability of Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials in Healthy Subjects

Suwicha Isaradisaikul; Darcy Strong; Jamie Marie Moushey; Sandra Abbott Gabbard; Steven R. Ackley; Herman A. Jenkins

Objective: To analyze test-retest reliability of vestibular evoked myogenic potential (VEMP) responses with and without the use of electromyography (EMG) monitoring in people with normal audiovestibular function. Patients: Twenty adult volunteers with no history of ear disease, normal otoscopic examination, normal pure-tone audiometry thresholds, and normal tympanograms. Interventions: Prospective evaluation of VEMP responses with and without the use of EMG monitoring in 2 separate sessions 1 to 4 weeks apart. Main Outcome Measures: Threshold repeatability, p13 and n23 latency, p13-n23 interlatency, and interamplitude and interaural amplitude difference from the first and the second sessions were assessed via the intraclass correlation coefficient. Results: Test-retest reliability of p13-n23 interamplitude was found to be excellent, and the reliability of threshold and latency was found to be fair to good (with the exception of poor reliability for p13 latency in the EMG monitoring condition). Conclusion: Overall, VEMP response parameters were found to have fair to good test-retest reliability. The intraclass correlation coefficient value for amplitude was found to be more reliable than latency, with the latency of n23 more reliable than the latency of p13. Clinicians should consider these findings when interpreting VEMP responses. Maintenance of symmetric head rotation with and without EMG monitoring produced reliably reproducible results, the VEMP amplitude being the best criteria.


Laryngoscope | 1985

Long-term adaptive changes of the vestibulo-ocular reflex in patients following acoustic neuroma surgery.

Herman A. Jenkins

A series of 26 patients undergoing translabyrinthine acoustic neuroma surgery was evaluated pre‐ and postoperatively using rotatory vestibular testing. Patients were tested immediately prior to surgery and followed long‐term at frequent intervals for periods of one week to two years, depending on availability and length of time postoperative. Rotatory testing was performed at multiple frequencies of 0.0125, 0.05, and 0.2 Hz, and the vestibulo‐ocular reflex was measured using electro‐oculographic techniques. Dependent variables of the slow component of the vestibulo‐ocular reflex were derived by computer analysis, including gain, phase, DC bias, ampullopetal and ampullofugal responses of the remaining labyrinth, and asymmetry. These variables changed in a predictable fashion as related to the reciprocal of time. Results of this data are fitted with a linear statistical model, validating the changes.

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Newton J. Coker

Baylor College of Medicine

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Daniel J. Tollin

University of Colorado Denver

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Kanthaiah Koka

University of Colorado Denver

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James Jerger

University of Texas at Dallas

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Robert D. Yee

National Institutes of Health

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J. Eric Lupo

University of Colorado Denver

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Jefim Goldberg

Baylor College of Medicine

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