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Dive into the research topics where Raquel Manrique-Huarte is active.

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Featured researches published by Raquel Manrique-Huarte.


Otology & Neurotology | 2011

Treatment of Ménière's disease with "on-demand" intratympanic gentamicin injections.

Raquel Manrique-Huarte; Francisco Guillén-Grima; Nicolas Perez-Fernandez

Objective: To determine the clinical response to intratympanic administration of gentamicin in patients with Ménières disease and to ascertain whether the pure-tone average, caloric test, or disease duration might predict clinical control. Design: Prospective study. Patients were followed for at least 2 years after the first injection (mean follow up time, 39 mo), and a Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to determine the survival curve that best explains the response to treatment. Setting: Tertiary center, University hospital. Patients: Individuals diagnosed with unilateral Ménières disease that did not respond to previous medical treatment and who had not previously undergone surgery. Of the initial 83 patients recruited, 9 were lost during the follow-up, and thus, 74 subjects were included in the study. Intervention: In the consultants surgery, a myringotomy was performed with topic administration of phenol before the intratympanic administration of 2 to 3 ml of gentamicin (26.7 mg/ml). Further injections were administered if vertigo was not controlled and recurred. Main Outcome Measures: Absence of vertigo and the need for subsequent injections as measured in using a Kaplan-Meier time-to-event process. To test predictive variables, the log-rank test was used. Results: Complete control of vertigo was obtained with a single injection of gentamicin in 53% of the patients. Subsequent injections offered a 50% chance of obtaining complete control. Better results were obtained in patients in whom disease duration was less than 3 years. Conclusion: On-demand administration of intratympanic gentamicin provides an alternative treatment for medically refractory Ménières disease. Moreover, the Kaplan-Meier analysis was useful to analyze recurrent manifestations, such as vertigo attacks in Ménières disease.


Laryngoscope | 2015

Single intratympanic gentamicin injection in Ménière's disease: VOR change and prognostic usefulness

Pedro Marques; Raquel Manrique-Huarte; Nicolas Perez-Fernandez

Assess angular vestibular‐ocular reflex (VOR) changes after treatment with intratympanic gentamicin (ITG) for Ménières disease (MD) and impact on short‐term follow‐up.


Acta otorrinolaringológica española | 2012

Exploración clínica y videoasistida del reflejo vestíbulo-oculomotor: análisis comparativo

Nicolas Perez-Fernandez; Vivian Gallegos-Constantino; Luz Barona-Lleo; Raquel Manrique-Huarte

INTRODUCTION The assessment of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) is one of the main steps in clinically evaluating patients with dizziness. It can be performed at the bedside with common head-impulse test in which eye position is analysed at the end of the head-thrust. It is an important test due to its high specificity but low sensitivity. MATERIAL AND METHODS We studied 179 patients with different types of balance- affecting disorders. The results were analysed in contingency tables. The clinical test was classified as normal or abnormal according to the absence or existence, respectively, of fixation saccades once the head-thrust was ended. The video head-impulse test (vHIT) was classified according to vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) gain and presence of fixation saccades. The speed of the slow phase of spontaneous nystagmus was also quantified, as well as the caloric test results. RESULTS There were significant differences (Chi-square test, P=0.00) for the findings in the clinical evaluation and with the vHIT: 32.1% of the tests performed yielded different findings in both tests. In the vHIT, the differences were due to the finding of normal gain with saccades; in these patients, the mean canal paresis was significantly abnormal: 39% ± 10%. CONCLUSIONS The distribution of findings for the VOR bedside examination and for that with the help of a video system are significantly different; as such, the video head-impulse examination is not simply an added VOR detection and registration system. The difference relies mainly on a vHIT response characterised as of normal gain but with fixation saccades. These have been considered as the cause for the low sensitivity of the bedside VOR examination and sometimes regarded as normal responses; we have demonstrated that these findings are abnormal according to the findings of higher canal paresis in the caloric test.


Case reports in otolaryngology | 2015

A Puzzle of Vestibular Physiology in a Meniere’s Disease Acute Attack

Marta Martínez-López; Raquel Manrique-Huarte; Nicolas Perez-Fernandez

The aim of this paper is to present for the first time the functional evaluation of each of the vestibular receptors in the six semicircular canals in a patient diagnosed with Menieres disease during an acute attack. A 54-year-old lady was diagnosed with left Menieres disease who during her regular clinic review suffers an acute attack of vertigo, with fullness and an increase of tinnitus in her left ear. Spontaneous nystagmus and the results in the video head-impulse test (vHIT) are shown before, during, and after the attack. Nystagmus was initially left beating and a few minutes later an upbeat component was added. No skew deviation was observed. A decrease in the gain of the vestibuloocular reflex (VOR) and the presence of overt saccades were observed when the stimuli were in the plane of the left superior semicircular canal. At the end of the crisis nystagmus decreased and vestibuloocular reflex returned to almost normal. A review of the different possibilities to explain these findings points to a hypothetical utricular damage.


Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2016

Treatment for Hearing Loss among the Elderly: Auditory Outcomes and Impact on Quality of Life

Raquel Manrique-Huarte; Diego Calavia; Alicia Huarte Irujo; Laura Girón; Manuel Manrique-Rodríguez

The study aim was to determine the benefit of cochlear implantation and hearing aids in older adults diagnosed with hearing loss and to evaluate the index of depression, anxiety and quality of life after such treatments. A retrospective cohort comprised 117 patients older than 65 years and diagnosed with moderate to profound hearing loss who were included and classified into 2 groups (treated vs. non-treated). A battery of tests including auditory (pure-tone average, disyllabic words in quiet at 65 dB SPL) and findings from a series of questions relevant to quality of life were compared between both groups. Auditory outcomes for disyllabic words were 58.21% for the cochlear implant-treated group and 82.8% for the hearing aid-treated group. There was a positive effect on anxiety, depression, health status and quality of life in the cochlear implant group versus the profound hearing loss control group. We conclude that older adults with moderate to profound hearing loss gain benefit from hearing aids or cochlear implants not only in terms of improved hearing function, but also in terms of positive effects on anxiety, depression, health status and quality of life.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2014

The vestibulo-ocular reflex assessment in patients with Ménière's disease: examining all semicircular canals.

Cristina Zulueta-Santos; Barbara Lujan; Raquel Manrique-Huarte; Nicolas Perez-Fernandez

Abstract Conclusion: The distribution of abnormal results is not uniform between different canals in each patient; the most frequent gain reduction is obtained for the posterior canal. Gain reduction reflects the disease duration and amount of hearing loss. Objective: To test the hypothesis that the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) evoked after stimulation of each semicircular canal behaves in a different manner in patients with unilateral definite Ménière’s disease. Methods: We studied the VOR evoked by rapid head-impulses in the plane of the 6 semicircular canals in 36 patients. It was evaluated with a video system that analyzes the head and eye velocity and the gain was the objective measure. Results: In 12 (33.3%) patients the examination of both ears was normal for all the semicircular canals, in 12 patients the results from the affected ear were abnormal in at least 1 of the semicircular canals, in 11 (30.5%) patients the results were abnormal in at least 1 of the semicircular canals in both the affected and unaffected ears, and in 1 (2.9%) patient the results were abnormal only in the unaffected ear. The most frequent abnormal result was obtained from the posterior canal of the affected ear and from the coupled superior canal of the unaffected ear. The distribution of abnormal findings was dependent on the disease duration and hearing loss.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2014

Vestibulo-ocular reflex in patients with superior semicircular canal benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV)

Nicolas Perez-Fernandez; Marta Martínez-López; Raquel Manrique-Huarte

Abstract Conclusion: The function of all the semicircular canals in patients with idiopathic benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) in whom otoconial debris is located in the superior semicircular canal (SSC) is normal. Objective: BPPV of SSC is an infrequent entity in which otoconial debris evokes vertigo and nystagmus in the head-hanging position and during anterior flexion of the patient. Methods: We studied the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in 12 patients with this particular type of BPPV. The reflex was evoked by rapid head impulses in the plane of the three semicircular canals in the affected and the normal ear. The reflex was evaluated with a video system that analyzes the head and eye velocity: the gain (the relation between both magnitudes) was the objective measure. Results: The mean gain of VOR was within normal limits for the six semicircular canals and there were no significant differences between the same canals on each side of patients with BPPV in whom canalolithiasis was located in the SSC. However, gain asymmetry was different for each pair of canals.


Acta otorrinolaringológica española | 2017

Actividad laboral en pacientes tratados con implantes cocleares

Alicia Huarte; Marta Martínez-López; Raquel Manrique-Huarte; Sandra Erviti; Diego Calavia; Cora Alonso; Manuel Manrique

INTRODUCTION The aim of this study was to determine the impact that the cochlear implant (CI) had in the working life of individuals implanted, using the first version of a questionnaire developed in the cochlear implant program at the University Clinic of Navarre. Its purpose was to demonstrate that the CI significantly affected the working lives of these patients. MATERIAL AND METHODS This was a retrospection study on a population of 60 patients (mean age, 48 years old) with bilateral profound sensorineural hearing loss treated with CI and to whom a questionnaire on working life satisfaction was given. RESULTS Of the patients completing the questionnaire, 94.23% were currently satisfied at work. Almost all of them (93.05%) were more motivated to go to work after the implantation. The majority (79.31%) considered themselves more competent after surgery and device activation. Social relations at work were considered to have improved after cochlear implantation by 67.23% of patients. CONCLUSIONS The CI provided positive support in the professional sphere as well as in social abilities by improving communication skills of implanted patients. The development of tools to assess the degree of job satisfaction of patients treated with a CI is of great interest.


Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2015

Functional neuroimaging studies in asymmetric hearing loss.

Marisela Cardier; Cristina Zulueta-Santos; Raquel Manrique-Huarte; Elena Prieto; Berta García-García; Javier Arbizu; Manuel Manrique

This article presents an analysis of the impact of functional neuroimaging studies (positron emission tomography, PET) in asymmetric hearing loss based on the clinical expertise obtained from a group of 21 patients. In these patients, PET studies are performed at rest and after auditory stimulation in order to measure the increase in brain activity in the ipsi- and contralateral cortex, providing supporting evidence to recommend a specific treatment and the side to implant. In conclusion, PET is a useful tool for selected cases in which information on the metabolic status of the auditory pathway can drive the decision regarding the treatment of the most appropriate ear. However, in view of our small sample, further research is needed to confirm our results in this topic.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2015

Long-term follow-up of late onset vestibular complaints in patients with cochlear implant

Mauricio González-Navarro; Raquel Manrique-Huarte; Manuel Manrique-Rodríguez; Alicia Huarte-Irujo; Nicolas Perez-Fernandez

Abstract Conclusion: Patients with cochlear implants should be treated no differently than non-implanted patients with similar symptomatology. Objectives: To describe the spectrum of symptomatology, treatment, and long-term follow-up of patients with cochlear implant and vestibular complaints. Methods: This retrospective study included 25 patients with late onset vestibular complaints (more than 1 month post-implantation). Each patient underwent an extensive interrogatory and physical exam with ancillary test to complete a diagnosis. Treatment was given according to this and all patients followed a vestibular rehabilitation program. Results: The total population was 72% male and 28% female, median age was 58 years; minimal follow-up was 9 months (mean = 51, median = 34). Cochleostomy was performed in eight cases and round window insertion was performed in 19 (two patients were removed from each group in the analysis due to their bilateral implantation under a different approach). The mean time from implant to vestibular symptoms was 53 months, median = 32; a Kaplan Meier graphic showed the round window approach has faster onset of symptoms with statistical significance (p = 0.020). The most common complaint was instability in all patients and after both surgical approaches. No difference in symptoms was found with a Kruskall Wallis test except for vertigo spells (more common in the round window approach). In 12 patients the symptomatology was attributed to the implanted side. In the long-term follow-up a relatively high number of patients (20/25) recovered with standard treatment, suggesting the presence of the implant is not associated with poor recovery prognosis.

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Eduardo Martín-Sanz

European University of Madrid

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