We studied nine patients with unilateral abrupt deafness caused by acoustic neuroma surgery. Cortical responses to tones delivered to the intact ear were recorded postoperatively with a 122-channel whole-scalp neuromagnetometer. In three patients, followed for 12 months with 2-4 measurements, evoked responses originating in the auditory cortices were weak and delayed one month after the operation in both hemispheres. During the follow-up, the amplitudes reached the control level. No response abnormalities were found in patients who were studied 1.5-4.5 years after the operation. Our findings suggest that abrupt unilateral deafness causes immediate changes in the function of auditory pathways of adult humans and that reorganization takes place within 1 year.