The “Near”-Narrowed Internal Auditory Canal Syndrome in Adults: Clinical Aspects, Audio-Vestibular Findings, and Radiological Criteria for Diagnosis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Population
2.2. Audio-Vestibular Assessment
2.3. Radiological Assessment
2.4. HRCT Steps for Assessing the Morphology and Dimensions of IACs
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- Evaluation of the smallest anteroposterior and craniocaudal IAC diameters, both in the axial and coronal planes, after measuring the IAC length (Figure 1(I,II));
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- Description of bony abnormalities of the IAC walls (normal bone, fibrous dysplasia, meningeal calcifications, and/or osteoma of exostosis—if applicable);
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- Evaluation of any significant angulation or deformation of the IAC in the craniocaudal and anteroposterior planes.
2.5. MRI Steps for Assessing the Morphology of IACs
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- Assessment of the perineural fluid environment in the IAC (particularly when contact between the CVN and IAC walls is visualized);
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- Assessment of any angulation between the cisternal pathway and intramedullary path of the CVN (high-resolution T2) or a significant angulation of the CVN in the IAC or at its meatus;
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- Evaluating the presence of a vascular structure compressing the CVN (characterized by neuronal indentation or deviation of the CVN pathway in the REZ or toward the origin of CVN in the brainstem);
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- Analysis of fusion images between high-resolution T2 and HRCT of the temporal bones (to improve assessment of the CVN trajectory and, therefore, detection of any deviations within the IAC in the axial or coronal plane);
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- Evaluation of anteroposterior and craniocaudal diameters of the IAC (Figure 2(I,II)).
2.6. Group’s Selection for the Radiological Comparative Morphometric Study
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- The study group (SG) 59 subjects 18 M, 41 F) with a clinical presentation and audio-vestibular signs suggestive of defined or probable VP according to the Barany Society recommendations, but for whom attentive MRI assessment excluded a vascular loop or any other known retro cochlear pathologies;
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- Control group 1 (CG1): 59 adult (18 M, 41 F) subjects who received a cochlear implant (CI), having all normal inner ear HRCT and RMI imagery, pre- and post-operative vestibular evaluations, and who never reported vertigo before and after CI surgery;
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- Control group 2 (CG2): 59 children and adolescent subjects (18 M, 41 F) who received a CI, having all normal inner ear HRCT and RMI imagery, pre- and post-operative vestibular evaluations, and who never reported vertigo before and after CI surgery.
2.7. Data Processing and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Epidemiology
3.2. Clinical Findings
3.3. Audio-Vestibular Findings
3.4. Radiological Findings: Group Comparison
3.5. Subject Repartition according to the IAC Dimensions
4. Discussion
4.1. The Near-Narrowed Internal Auditory Canal: A Neglected Cause of VP and/or Assimilated Clinical Condition
4.2. Further Clinical Considerations
4.3. Morphometric Considerations
4.4. Limitations and Further Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Unilateral (n=) | Bilateral (n=) | |
---|---|---|
Hyperacusis | 5 (8.5%) | 17 (28.8%) |
Tinnitus during physical effort | 5 (8.5%) | 15 (25.4%) |
Continuous tinnitus | 1 (1.7%) | 8 (13.5%) |
Otalgia | 10 (16.9%) | 0 (0%) |
Progressive non-genetic SNHL | 4 (6.8%) | 7 (11.9%) |
Ear fullness | 5 (8.5%) | 0 (0%) |
Number of Subjects (Percentage of the 59 Subjects in the Study Group) | |
---|---|
Positional vertigo | 39 (66%) |
Acetylleucine ineffectiveness | 29 (49%) |
Dizziness on rapid head movements | 26 (44%) |
Exercise-induced vertigo | 25 (42%) |
Chronic imbalance and dizziness | 23 (38.5%) |
Acute vertigo | 3 (5%) |
Progressive bilateral vestibulopathy | 2 (3.3%) |
Paroxysmal vertigo | 2 (3.3%) |
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Ionescu, E.C.; Reynard, P.; Idriss, S.A.; Ltaief-Boudriga, A.; Joly, C.-A.; Thai-Van, H. The “Near”-Narrowed Internal Auditory Canal Syndrome in Adults: Clinical Aspects, Audio-Vestibular Findings, and Radiological Criteria for Diagnosis. J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12, 7580. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12247580
Ionescu EC, Reynard P, Idriss SA, Ltaief-Boudriga A, Joly C-A, Thai-Van H. The “Near”-Narrowed Internal Auditory Canal Syndrome in Adults: Clinical Aspects, Audio-Vestibular Findings, and Radiological Criteria for Diagnosis. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023; 12(24):7580. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12247580
Chicago/Turabian StyleIonescu, Eugen C., Pierre Reynard, Samar A. Idriss, Aicha Ltaief-Boudriga, Charles-Alexandre Joly, and Hung Thai-Van. 2023. "The “Near”-Narrowed Internal Auditory Canal Syndrome in Adults: Clinical Aspects, Audio-Vestibular Findings, and Radiological Criteria for Diagnosis" Journal of Clinical Medicine 12, no. 24: 7580. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12247580
APA StyleIonescu, E. C., Reynard, P., Idriss, S. A., Ltaief-Boudriga, A., Joly, C. -A., & Thai-Van, H. (2023). The “Near”-Narrowed Internal Auditory Canal Syndrome in Adults: Clinical Aspects, Audio-Vestibular Findings, and Radiological Criteria for Diagnosis. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 12(24), 7580. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12247580