Literature DB >> 23370567

Congenital dehiscence in the posterior semicircular canal.

Jaime Whyte1, Ana Isabel Cisneros, Claudio Martínez, Borja Gracia-Tello, Ana Whyte, Rafael Crovetto, Miguel Ángel Crovetto.   

Abstract

HYPOTHESIS: Posterior semicircular canal dehiscence (PSCD) may be of congenital origin.
BACKGROUND: PSCD is characterized by the lack of bone coverage, which results in its lumen being exposed to the meninges of the posterior cranial fossa or to the gulf of the jugular vein. It has an incidence of 0.2%. Its presence has been associated with several well-defined entities, although a congenital origin has not been proven.
METHODS: We have analyzed, from a macroscopic, microscopic, and radiologic (computed tomography) viewpoint, the right temporal bone of a 32-week-old human fetus that presented a defect in the bone coverage located in the rear.
RESULTS: The macroscopic study showed a solution of continuity in the posterior semicircular canal, with elliptic morphology and smooth edges. This defect was 3.4 mm long with a width that varied between 0.67 mm in its apical portion and 1.42 in the basal portion. The radiologic study (computed tomography) showed the absence of bone coverage of the posterior semicircular canal, which was open to the intracranial space in the posterior fossa. Its histologic study showed good bone coverage of this canal at the expense of compact bone tissue. However, at the medial end, there is a lack of bone coverage, resulting in the lumen of the canal being open to the intracranial space. The bone edges of the defect did not present any osteoclast activity.
CONCLUSION: The lack of bone coverage (dehiscence) of the posterior semicircular canal in a 32-week-old fetus suggests a congenital component of bony dehiscences of this canal. Even so, this single finding does not conclusively prove the congenital component, and the dehiscence is a finding that can be part of and not by itself a syndrome.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23370567     DOI: 10.1097/MAO.0b013e3182804b0f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Otol Neurotol        ISSN: 1531-7129            Impact factor:   2.311


  2 in total

1.  Development of ossification in the vertical semicircular canals: tomographic study.

Authors:  Ana Isabel Cisneros; Marta Herreros; Jesús Obón; Jaime Whyte
Journal:  Surg Radiol Anat       Date:  2018-06-18       Impact factor: 1.246

Review 2.  Dehiscence of the superior semicircular canal: a review of the literature on its possible pathogenic explanations.

Authors:  Cristina Brandolini; Giovanni Carlo Modugno; Antonio Pirodda
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2013-04-18       Impact factor: 2.503

  2 in total

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