Literature DB >> 23853402

Tympanometric findings in superior semicircular canal dehiscence syndrome.

A Castellucci1, C Brandolini, G Piras, G C Modugno.   

Abstract

The diagnostic role of audio-impedancemetry in superior semicircular canal dehiscence (SSCD) disease is well known. In particular, since the first reports, the presence of evoked acoustic reflexes has represented a determining instrumental exhibit in differential diagnosis with other middle ear pathologies that are responsible for a mild-low frequencies air-bone gap (ABG). Even though high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) completed by parasagittal reformatted images still represents the diagnostic gold standard, several instrumental tests can support a suspect of labyrinthine capsule dehiscence when "suggestive" symptoms occur. Objective and subjective audiometry often represents the starting point of the diagnostic course aimed at investigating the cause responsible for the so-called "intra-labyrinthine conductive hearing loss". The purpose of this study is to evaluate the role of tympanometry, in particular of the inter-aural asymmetry ratio in peak compliance as a function of different mild-low frequencies ABG on the affected side, in the diagnostic work-up in patients with unilateral SSCD. The working hypothesis is that an increase in admittance of the "inner-middle ear" conduction system due to a "third mobile window" could be detected by tympanometry. A retrospective review of the clinical records of 45 patients with unilateral dehiscence selected from a pool of 140 subjects diagnosed with SSCD at our institution from 2003 to 2011 was performed. Values of ABG amplitude on the dehiscent side and tympanometric measurements of both ears were collected for each patient in the study group (n = 45). An asymmetry between tympanometric peak compliance of the involved side and that of the contralateral side was investigated by calculating the inter-aural difference and the asymmetry ratio of compliance at the eardrum. A statistically significant correlation (p = 0.015 by Fisher's test) between an asymmetry ratio ≥ 14% in favour of the pathologic ear and an ABG > 20 dB nHL on the same side was found. When "evocative" symptoms of SSCD associated with important ABG occur, the inter-aural difference in tympanometric peak compliance at the eardrum in favour of the "suspected" side could suggest an intra-labyrinthine origin for the asymmetry. Tympanometry would thus prove to be a useful instrument in clinical-instrumental diagnosis of SSCD in detection of cases associated with alterations of inner ear impedance.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Inner ear impedance; Intra-labyrinthine conductive hearing loss; Superior semicircular canal dehiscence; Tympanometry

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23853402      PMCID: PMC3665379     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital        ISSN: 0392-100X            Impact factor:   2.124


Introduction

Superior semicircular canal dehiscence (SSCD) syndrome is a recently described pathological condition caused by the absence of the bony roof of the anterior semicircular canal that results in abnormal exposure of the inner ear to the action of the surrounding structures . The lesion is responsible for the onset of substantial variance of both cochlear and vestibular symptoms including imbalance, sound and/or pressure induced vertigo, autophony and hyperacusis . The reason why some patients develop only vestibular or cochlear symptoms, while in others both patterns are clearly present, has not been clarified. Although clinical and instrumental findings expressing the vestibular features of the pathology, and in particular vertical/torsional nystagmus induced by sound and/or pressure stimuli, first allowed Minor et al. to characterize this clinical entity , the diagnostic role of audiometry and impedance audiometric testing in SSCD has been well established. Mainly, a mild-low frequency air-bone gap (ABG) associated with evoked acoustic reflexes has represented a determining instrumental sign in differential diagnosis with other middle ear pathologies since the first reports . In fact, it is well known that in some patients with SSCD this pathological third-window lesion becomes responsible for dissipation of acoustic energy at low frequencies through the vestibule, resulting in hearing loss by air conduction and improvement of cochlear sensitivity to bone-conducted sounds . A tendency to lateralize the Weber tuning fork test to the affected side, even positioning the instrument away from the head, has also been described as a distinctive feature of this condition in addition to values of bone conduction threshold < 0 dB nHL . Even though high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) completed by parasagittal reformatted images along the plane of the SSC definitely continues to represent the gold standard , several instrumental tests can support a diagnostic hypothesis of labyrinthine capsule dehiscence when "suggestive" symptoms occur. Among these, the study of vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMPs) has assumed a crucial role , especially after the recent introduction of ocular VEMPs . Nonetheless, in daily clinical practice subjective and objective audiometry often represents the starting point of the diagnostic course aimed at investigating the cause responsible for the socalled "inner ear conductive hearing loss" - . The purpose of this study is to confirm the diagnostic value of the well established audiometric patterns of SSCD and detect additional "evocative" audio-impedancemetric patterns. In particular, this analysis was made to demonstrate SSCD-induced increased ear admittance (due to the "third-window mechanism") through tympanometric testing to determine whether the ear affected by SSCD showed a statistically significant higher amplitude in peak compliance compared to the controlateral ear under different conditions of ABG measurement.

Methods

A retrospective review of the clinical records of 140 patients (70 males and 70 females, mean age = 53 years, range = 8-80 years) diagnosed with SSCD at the ENT Unit of our institution over a 9-year period (January 2003 - September 2011) was performed. Among these, 46 subjects (33%) presented with bilateral dehiscence. Diagnostic criteria were radiological evidence of bony dehiscence of the superior canal as well as at least one suggestive sign of SSCD on vestibular testing (sound and/or pressure-evoked eye movements or threshold lowering of VEMPs). All patients had underwent the same detailed audio-vestibular evaluation including full anamnesis, otoscopy, audio-impedancemetric testing, infrared video-oculoscopic examination, bi-mastoid vibration test, air-conducted cervical VEMPs (c-VEMPs) study with threshold analysis and temporal bone HRCT scans with multiplanar reconstructions on the plane aligning with vertical canals. Since the aim of this study is to identify through tympanometry SSCD-induced asymmetry in admittance between the ears of each subject enrolled in the analysis, cases affected by bilateral dehiscence (n = 46) were excluded from the investigation because of the considerable inter-individual variance in impedancemetric measurements emerging from literature - . Attention was thus focused on the inter-aural gap in tympanometric peak compliance in unilateral cases. A sub-sample of 45 patients with unilateral SSCD (23 males and 22 females, mean age = 53 years, range age = 8-80 years, 20 right affected ears, 25 left affected ears) was included in this study, once those cases associated with external and/ or middle ear pathologies or with previous ear surgery (n = 49) because of their unsuitability for a tympanometric study were excluded. All patients had intact tympanic membranes at otoscopy. Pure-tone audiometry was examined using standard clinical procedures to obtain air conduction (125-8000 Hz) and bone conduction (250-4000 Hz) thresholds with masking if needed. For each affected ear, the mean mild-low frequency ABG was calculated by using the pure tone average (PTA) between gaps at 250 and 500 Hz. Impedancemetry was performed with the aid of an Amplaid 728 impedance meter, with patients in a sitting position. Standard tympanometry (using a 226 Hz probe tone) showed bilateral type-A peaked curves in all 45 subjects, with peak compliance ranging within endomeatal pressure values of -100 and +100 daPa. For each patient, the mean value among 3 consequent tympanometric measurements performed within 30 min with the subject in the same position was collected and considered in the analysis. In all cases in which an ossicular discontinuity was suspected, tympanometry with 667 Hz-probe tone was performed to exclude this. For each subject belonging to this sub-sample, asymmetry between tympanometric peak compliance of the ear involved by dehiscence (Ca) and that of the contralateral ear (Cb) was investigated by calculating the inter-aural difference of compliance (ΔC) at the eardrum (Fig. 1), and the asymmetry ratio (ΔC%) expressing in percentage the ratio of ΔC to the sum of the 2 values of compliance as shown below:
Fig. 1.

The upper image shows tympanometric peak compliance measurements of the right dehiscent ear (Ca) and the left healthy ear (Cb) corresponding to impedancemetric data of the patient n. 25 from the study group. Two parallel dotted lines indicate the levels corresponding to the peak compliances of the two sides (0.73 ml for the right side and 0.27 ml for the left side). The distance between the two dotted lines indicates the inter-aural difference (ΔC) in tympanometric peak compliance (0.46 ml in this case). The lower images represent the HRCT reformatted scans aligning with the plane of the SSC (Pöschl plane) of the same patient. Fig. 1A represents the right affected superior canal (dehiscence indicated by the arrow). Fig. 1B represents the left superior canal (intact bony roof indicated by the arrowhead).

The upper image shows tympanometric peak compliance measurements of the right dehiscent ear (Ca) and the left healthy ear (Cb) corresponding to impedancemetric data of the patient n. 25 from the study group. Two parallel dotted lines indicate the levels corresponding to the peak compliances of the two sides (0.73 ml for the right side and 0.27 ml for the left side). The distance between the two dotted lines indicates the inter-aural difference (ΔC) in tympanometric peak compliance (0.46 ml in this case). The lower images represent the HRCT reformatted scans aligning with the plane of the SSC (Pöschl plane) of the same patient. Fig. 1A represents the right affected superior canal (dehiscence indicated by the arrow). Fig. 1B represents the left superior canal (intact bony roof indicated by the arrowhead). According to the literature, differences of ΔC ≥ 0.22 ml and asymmetry ratios of ΔC% ≥ 14% have been assumed as to be sufficient to express a significant (pathologic) impedancemetric difference between the two ears. The subsample of 45 patients was then stratified for different values of ABG amplitude on the affected ear and correlations between ΔC and ΔC% in favour of the pathological side, and different ABG entities on the affected ear were finally investigated. To determine if correlations were statistically significant, a X 2 test (chi-square test, Fisher's test) was used to analyze the data. A 0.05 level of significance (p) was considered statistically significant.

Results

Of the 91 patients remaining after excluding from the initial pool those cases associated with positive histories for pathological middle and/or external ear-system processes and those with previous ear surgery (n = 49), 87% presented with at least one cochlear symptom in anamnesis (hyperacusis, hearing loss, tinnitus, autophony, aural fullness). Among these, 58 subjects complained of hearing loss on the pathological side. Analyzing the audiometric records of the ears affected by SSCD (n = 137, with 45 ears from 45 patients affected by unilateral dehiscence and 92 ears from 46 patients with bilateral SSCD), 13 (9%) were consistent with normal hearing function, 27 ears (20%) showed sensorineural hearing loss, while in 41 cases (30%) the type of hearing impairment was mixed and in 56 ears (41%) was conductive (14 cases presented with values of bone conduction threshold < 0 dB nHL). Despite the presence of a mild-low frequencies ABG in 71% of audiometric tests (n = 97), 80 cases showed normally evoked acoustic reflexes. Of the mean mild-low frequencies ABG for each ear in this group, 47 audiograms had an ABG < 15 dB nHL, 37 had an ABG ≥ 15 dB nHL and ≤ 30 dB nHL, and 13 had an ABG > 30 dB nHL. Gap values ranged from 7.5 dB to 55 dB nHL, with a mean value of 18.3 dB nHL, a median of 15 dB nHL and standard deviation (SD) of 12.2 dB nHL. Concerning the sub-sample of 45 patients affected by unilateral dehiscence, the hearing function of the pathological ear was normal in 2 cases (4%) and consistent with sensorineural hearing loss in 6 ears (13%), while mixed type hearing impairment was registered in 16 cases (36%) and conductive in 21 ears (47%), with 4 cases presenting with values of bone conduction threshold < 0 dB nHL. As for impedancemetry, ipsi- and contralateral acoustic reflexes were bilaterally present in 35 patients, bilaterally absent in 5 cases, absent only contralaterally to the lesion in 4 patients and absent only ipsilaterally to the lesion in 1 case. Tympanometric peak compliance ranged between 0.18 and 2.77 ml (mean = 0.82 ml, median = 0.75 ml, SD = 0.47 ml), with mean peak compliance on affected ears of 0.83 ml (median = 0.76 ml, SD = 0.45 ml) and mean peak compliance on non-involved ears of 0.81 ml (median = 0.75 ml, SD = 0.50 ml). For each patient in the study group, between ear-difference in tympanometric peak compliance was measured and expressed in terms of inter-aural difference (ΔC) and asymmetry ratio (ΔC%) of compliance as previously described. Measurements of ΔC ranged from 0 to 1.81 ml (mean = 0.28 ml, median = 0.17 ml, SD = 0.33 ml) and ΔC% values ranged between 0 and 82% (mean = 15.8%, median = 14%, SD = 14.3%) (Table I).
Table I.

Audio-impedancemetric data of the study group: SSCD side = side affected by superior semicircular canal dehiscence; ABG = mean air-bone gap between gap values at 250 and 500 Hz on the pathological ear; Ca = tympanometric peak compliance on the affected ear; SRa = stapedial reflexes on the affected side; Cb = tympanometric peak compliance on the healthy ear; SRb = stapedial reflexes on the healthy side; |ΔC| = absolute value of inter-aural difference between tympanometric peak compliances; |ΔC%| = absolute value of inter-aural asymmetry ratio between tympanometric peak compliances; M = male; F = female; R = right; L = left; P = present; A = absent.

PatientAgeSexSSCD sideABG (dB)Ca (ml)SRaCb (ml)SRb|ΔC| (ml)|ΔC%| (%)
175FR00.82P0.95P0.137
259ML250.76P0.77P0.011
354FL22.50.68P0.51P0.1714
48FL250.33P0.20P0.1325
522FR17.51.87P1.42P0.4514
633MR250.43P0.59P0.1616
762ML100.75P1.30A0.5527
855FL52.50.35P0.29P0.069
953FR7.50.58P0.56P0.022
1063ML551.12A0.85A0.2714
1154ML22.50.56P0.95P0.3926
1258FR12.50.84P0.64P0.2014
1368FL7.51.98P2.35P0.379
1435FR00.62P0.74P0.129
1565FR17.50.25A0.26A0.012
1636ML00.97P1.22P0.2511
1757FR12.50.21A0.27A0.0613
1871ML27.50.55P0.63P0.087
1937ML100.70P1.17P0.4725
2040MR17.51.01P1.29P0.2812
2137ML2.50.89P0.58P0.3121
2278FL350.79P0.43P0.3630
2318FL151.14A0.71P0.4323
2445MR100.59P0.75P0.1612
2568FR22.50.73A0.27A0.4646
2647FL101.06P0.79P0.2715
2752MR150.85P0.97P0.127
2841FR51.10P0.83P0.2714
2919MR12.51.01P0.75P0.2615
3067ML7.51.65P2.77P1.1225
3172ML201.04P1.11P0.073
3250ML00.73P0.91P0.1811
3358ML252.01A0.20A1.8182
3467FR17.50.77P1.40P0.6329
3568FR7.50.18P0.25A0.0716
3637ML50.90P0.92P0.021
3774ML150.60P0.75P0.1511
3854ML12.50.99P0.95P0.042
3965MR22.51.82P0.87P0.9535
4070FR350.60P0.45A0.1514
4162MR100.30P0.46P0.1621
4248FL00.70P0.70P0.000
4361ML7.50.42P0.42P0.000
4447FL12.50.83P0.76P0.074
4580FR7.50.49P0.67A0.1816
Audio-impedancemetric data of the study group: SSCD side = side affected by superior semicircular canal dehiscence; ABG = mean air-bone gap between gap values at 250 and 500 Hz on the pathological ear; Ca = tympanometric peak compliance on the affected ear; SRa = stapedial reflexes on the affected side; Cb = tympanometric peak compliance on the healthy ear; SRb = stapedial reflexes on the healthy side; |ΔC| = absolute value of inter-aural difference between tympanometric peak compliances; |ΔC%| = absolute value of inter-aural asymmetry ratio between tympanometric peak compliances; M = male; F = female; R = right; L = left; P = present; A = absent. Considering 0.22 ml and 14% as the minimal cut-off value expressing a significant (pathologic) ΔC and ΔC% respectively, the relationship of inter-aural asymmetry of tympanometric peak compliance with different amplitudes of mean mild-low frequencies ABG on the affected ear was investigated. This was done to analyze the inter-aural spread of compliance in those patients in which the thirdwindow mechanism should result in a higher dissipation of acoustic energy (as shown by the pseudo-conductive hearing loss in audiometric testing). Once the study group was stratified in function of the ABG on the affected side, no statistically significant correlation between ears with ABG ≤ 20 dB nHL and subjects with relevant inter-aural ΔC (p = 0.467) (Table II) and ΔC% (p = 0.166) (Table III) in favour of the dehiscent side was obtained. Considering patients with ABG > 20 dB nHL on the affected side, a weak correlation with pathologic ΔC (p = 0.156) (Table IV) and a statistically significant correlation with pathologic ΔC% (p = 0.015) (Table V) in favour of the pathological side was obtained.
Table II.

Correlation between ears with ABG ≤ 20 dB nHL on the affected side and subjects with inter-aural difference between tympanometric peak compliances (ΔC) ≥ 0.22 ml in favour of the pathological side, with the corresponding P value.

ΔC (ml)
ABG (dB nHL) < 0.22 ≥ 0.22
> 20 13518
≤ 20 21627
341145

p = 0.467

Table III.

Correlation between ears with ABG ≤ 20 dB nHL on the affected side and subjects with inter-aural asymmetry ratio between tympanometric peak compliances (ΔC%) ≥ 14% in favour of the pathological side, with the corresponding P value.

ΔC% (%)
ABG (dB nHL) < 14 ≥ 14
> 20 10818
≤ 20 20727
301545

p = 0.166

Table IV.

Correlations between ears with ABG > 20 dB nHL on the affected side and subjects with inter-aural difference between tympanometric peak compliances (ΔC) ≥ 0.22 ml in favour of the pathological side, with the corresponding P value.

ΔC (ml)
ABG (dB nHL) < 0.22 ≥ 0.22
≤ 20 26632
> 20 8513
341145

p = 0.156

Table V.

Correlations between ears with ABG > 20 dB nHL on the affected side and subjects with inter-aural asymmetry ratio between tympanometric peak compliances (ΔC%) ≥ 14% in favour of the pathological side, with the corresponding P value.

ΔC% (%)
ABG (dB nHL) < 14 ≥ 14
≤ 20 25732
> 20 5813
301545

p = 0.015

Correlation between ears with ABG ≤ 20 dB nHL on the affected side and subjects with inter-aural difference between tympanometric peak compliances (ΔC) ≥ 0.22 ml in favour of the pathological side, with the corresponding P value. p = 0.467 Correlation between ears with ABG ≤ 20 dB nHL on the affected side and subjects with inter-aural asymmetry ratio between tympanometric peak compliances (ΔC%) ≥ 14% in favour of the pathological side, with the corresponding P value. p = 0.166 Correlations between ears with ABG > 20 dB nHL on the affected side and subjects with inter-aural difference between tympanometric peak compliances (ΔC) ≥ 0.22 ml in favour of the pathological side, with the corresponding P value. p = 0.156 Correlations between ears with ABG > 20 dB nHL on the affected side and subjects with inter-aural asymmetry ratio between tympanometric peak compliances (ΔC%) ≥ 14% in favour of the pathological side, with the corresponding P value. p = 0.015

Discussion

The existence of the so-called "third windows" was originally proposed by Ranke et al., referring to physiologic secondary fluid pathways between the inner ear and surrounding structures, beyond oval and round windows, being functionally ineffective when the two principal windows are open but coming into play when closed . This concept was resumed in experimental studies and then in clinical experience to justify a consistent number of pathological cases with an otherwise unexplained conductive hearing loss . Similarly, the occurrence of an additional pathological fenestration between the inner ear and the cranial cavity has been hypothesized to be responsible for the onset of those peculiar symptoms and signs, including conductive hearing loss, which led Minor et al. to define SSCD Syndrome - . Wide and exhaustive insight into the pathophysiologic basis of the mechanism at the origin of this clinical entity, especially concerning audiometric patterns, has been provided by the group of Merchant and Rosowsky . As clinicians have become familiar with this pathology, the different diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of SSCD have also been gradually pointed out, including instrumental findings that are useful in differential diagnosis with other otologic disorders. Nowadays, a wide series of clues and specific functional tests are available for advancing a diagnostic hypothesis of SSCD before resorting to radiologic confirmation. Over the last 10 years, when conductive hearing loss occurs in audiometric testing, even with poor vestibular symptomatology, clinicians have learned to use intact acoustic reflexes and/or preserved air-conducted VEMPs responses (or with threshold lower than normal) as useful tools to recognize a dehiscence pathology from other middle ear affections such as otosclerosis. If available, o-VEMPs , laser Doppler vibrometry of the umbo and otoacoustic emissions testing can also assist in diagnosis, sparing the patient unnecessary exploratory tympanotomies or unsuccessful stapedoplasties. To date, little attention has been given to tympanometric study in the diagnostic course of SSCD, and in particular there is a lack of knowledge about maximum compliance values and inter-aural asymmetries between peak compliances at the eardrum in previous case studies. Tympanometry has been classically used to provide diagnostic information on middle ear disorders - . Nevertheless, experimental data supports the theory that mechanical functions in the inner ear can affect compliance measurements at the tympanic membrane. Metz firstly investigated the effects of increased labyrinthine fluid pressure on sound transmission in fresh cadaver temporal bones, yielding measurable impedance changes . Macrae and Bulteau found comparable data measuring firstly decreased and then enhanced compliance values by filling a cadaver vestibule with silastic and then draining the cochlear fluid, respectively . Other authors have then confirmed that impedancemetry and tympanic membrane displacements are clinically suitable indirect techniques which can detect changes in intra-labyrinthine pressure in humans - . In 1973, Macrae observed an increasing in the input acoustic impedance of the cochlea in 4 subjects with acoustic neuroma, hypothesizing that those findings could be due to the indirect effect of the tumour on osmotic pressure of cochlear fluids . The first clinical evidences of primitive inner ear pathologies influencing measurements of impedance at the eardrum date to 1975 when Hall and Hughes , and contemporaneously Lloyd , studied the inter-aural stato-acoustic difference in patients with Ménière's disease. In particular, the former authors studied subjects with fullness due to unilateral Ménière's disease, observing reduced values of ipsilesional peak compliance in almost 90% of cases . Even though disproven by another study , these findings permitted the authors to confirm the pathophysiologic hypothesis of increased mechanical pressure in the intra-labyrinthine fluids as the basis of Ménière's disease, resulting in a stiffer system and in measurable reduced tympanometric values . Further studies have used impedance audiometry to detect changes in the stiffness of the middle-inner ear conduction system in patients with idiopathic or drug-induced endolymphatic hydrops . Similarly, by comparing the between-ear difference of maximum compliance at the eardrum, Goode found decreased conductance values on the involved side using a 660 Hz probe-tone tympanometer in 6 patients in which unilateral idiopathic perilymphatic hypertension was suspected . Standard and multifrequency tympanometry has also been used to assess the inner ear mechanical effect on impedance in another pathological "third window" condition of the labyrinth: large vestibular aqueduct syndrome (LVAS). In particular, decreased stato-acoustic compliances were found in those patients with fluctuating hearing loss indicating increased inner ear pressure, while low resonance frequency values were found in patients with stable hearing function probably reflecting an increase in endolymphatic volume and reduced inner ear impedance due to the LVA acting as a "third window" . The only experimental study assessing SSCD-induced changes in impedance has been conducted on chinchillas with a surgically performed canal fenestration . Even if a statistically significant increase in input admittance magnitude was seen, the authors did not use tympanometry to diagnose SSCD because of the small amplitude of impedancemetric changes induced by the dehiscence, and thus the likelihood for them to fall within normal ranges of values, being therefore not possible comparisons with normal ears . In regard to this latter difficulty, several aspects must be clarified to overcome these limits. Indeed, under physiological conditions, though it is reasonable to assume that the mobility of the tympano-ossicular system depends mainly on tympanic membrane status , there are several inter-individual variables that play a role in static impedance measurements, maintaining stable the probe-tone frequency. Irrespective of the variance due to age and sex of patients, being questionable the evidence whether it might be statistically significant - , further anatomical variables such as external acoustic canal volume , size and state of the air in the middle ear and mastoid spaces, mobility of the ossicular chain and finally input impedance to the cochlear fluids can all influence impedance measurements at the tympanic membrane. Due to these factors, the amplitude of normality ranges of compliance and the degree of overlap between measurements of healthy and pathological ears are so considerable that any attempt to compare tympanometric data among subjects would be inappropriate. Nevertheless, since both external and middle ear structures within any individual would be expected to be highly similar due to general body symmetry, as demonstrated by Feldman's findings , the range of data should decrease when examining the behaviour of the tympano-ossicular system in the same subject . Moller firstly noted in 6 healthy individuals that the inter-aural differences in static admittance were smaller than the inter-subject range . Consistent with this line of reasoning, there are additional clinical findings in which no significant difference in impedancemetric measurements within the same normal subject was seen, making it a potentially feasible data to detect unilateral pathologies . In particular, according to de Jonge and Valente, 80% of healthy subjects develop differences in static acoustic values (ΔC) that do not exceed 0.22 ml . Another retrospective clinical review found a mean inter-aural difference of 0.14 ml, with 90% of the population within the values of 0.34 ml, but with significant dispersion as a function of age . Ear asymmetry would thus seem to be more precisely quantified in terms of the ratio of compliance between the less stiff ear and the stiffer ear (Ca/Cb). According to the literature, normal values of between-ear ratio of compliance should range within 4/3 (= 1.33) and 3/2 (= 1.5) , narrowing the 2/1 score (= 2) firstly proposed by Jerger . In the current study, we considered a minimal inter-aural difference (ΔC) of 0.22 ml and a minimal asymmetry ratio (ΔC%) of 14% (approximately equivalent to a ratio (Ca/ Cb) of 1.33 as demonstrated by the following equations) as sufficient to express a non-physiologic asymmetry of peak compliance, aiming to find SSCD-induced increased admittance measurements. This correlation was determined once patients were stratified as a function of ΔC ≥ 0.22 ml and ΔC% ≥ 14% in favour of the pathological side, and then divided into two groups according to different amplitudes of mean mildlow frequencies ABG on the affected ear (≤ 20 dB nHL and > 20 dB nHL), in order to assess the role of impedancemetric differences as a function of hearing level. While between-ear differences of peak compliance (ΔC) do not seem to support any statistically significant outcome, the results provided evidence that patients with an ABG > 20 dB nHL on the dehiscent side tend to develop relevant asymmetry ratios (ΔC% ≥ 14%) in favour of the same side. In other words, acoustic compliance seems to be higher in those ears in which the considerable amplitude of conductive hearing loss would address clinicians to hypothesize a stiffening factor in the entire system, such as otosclerosis. Since the pathological asymmetry ratio in impedancemetric values points towards that ear as the most compliant, the otherwise unexplained mildlow frequencies ABG will unequivocally result from the improvement of the cochlear sensitivity to bone conduction and the acoustic energy dissipation through the dehiscence acting as a "third mobile window". Thus, even tympanometric asymmetry itself is likely to result from the same SSCD-induced increased compliance to the inner ear that is tested through the air-conducted VEMPs study. Definitive proof that the enhanced compliance measurements in these patients are the result of the dehiscence at the bony capsule of the vestibule will require ipsilesional lowering in tympanometric peak compliance after surgical canal repair, similar to postoperative closure of the ABG and normalization of VEMPs amplitudes and thresholds reported in literature. Interpreting ear differences in this fashion enhances the power of stato-acoustic compliance as a diagnostic tool in evaluating unilateral inner ear pathologies, when combined with an audiometric test. We therefore recommend inclusion of acoustic impedance assessment and estimation of inter-aural asymmetry ratio in tympanometric peak compliance as a part of the diagnostic work-up before middle ear exploration in patients with a functionally and anatomically normal middle ear and unilateral unexplained conductive hearing loss. In particular, the importance of detecting bone-conduction threshold in pure tone audiometry should be stressed, in order to reveal an otherwise missed conductive or pseudo-conductive hearing loss. In the presence of an ABG, if acoustic reflexes and air-conducted c-VEMPs are preserved, then the patient must undergo HRCT scans of the temporal bones to assess the integrity of labyrinthine bony structures. Similarly, even the presence of an higher than normal asymmetry ratio in tympanometric peak compliance in favour of the "suspected" ear, when occurring a wide ABG amplitude on that side, should remind the clinician and orient diagnosis towards an inner ear pathology. Moreover, of the various instrumental tests described in the literature as useful diagnostic tools for SSCD, tympanometric testing is perhaps the most widely available and also relatively simple to perform. The only limit in the application of the test, although non-invasive, well tolerated, cheap and easily repeatable, is the necessity that the external/middle ear and ossicular chain are not involved in any pathology, other than the unilaterality of the inner ear lesion.

Conclusions

This report describes a new sign of unilateral dehiscence of the superior semicircular canal and evaluates its usefulness in diagnostic course: namely, pathological asymmetry in tympanometric peak compliance in favour of the involved ear in the presence of an important mild-low frequencies conductive hearing loss on the same side. This clinical finding gives a clue to intra-labyrinthine disease when middle ear status appears normal by otoscopy as well as the reminder of the impedancemetric battery. To date, this is the only clinical study reporting that tympanometric measurements are a useful tool in the diagnostic work-up of superior canal dehiscence syndrome. Therefore, when "evocative" symptoms of SSCD associated with an important ABG occur, inter-aural difference of tympanometric peak compliance at the eardrum in favour of the "suspected" side could suggest an intra-labyrinthine origin for this asymmetry. Tympanometry would thus prove to be a useful instrument in clinical-instrumental diagnosis of dehiscence pathology since it can detect, as well as cervical VEMPs (with threshold analysis), those cases associated with alterations of inner ear impedance. Nonetheless, it is still unknown why conductive hearing loss is present only in a subset of patients affected by SSCD, as long as the vestibular myogenic potentials threshold is lowered not in all subjects with clear radiological evidence of dehiscence at the SSC. Similarly, in this report, the explanation why not all patients from the study group presenting with considerable ABG develop pathological asymmetry in stato-acoustic measurements in favour of the involved side remains unclear. It is possible that, in addition to subclinical alterations in middle ear structures and state, it must be hypothesized that other intra-labyrinthine variables, such as the patency of the superior canal rather than natural plugging of dehiscence by middle fossa structures, can influence the impedance in the inner ear, resulting in different clinical and instrumental expression of the syndrome. A larger number of patients would provide more insight in this regard, which will be the subject of a future study, by comparing clinical and instrumental findings with different anatomo-morphological data. Another forthcoming objective will be to compare the results of the present study with the values of c-VEMPs thresholds in unilateral SSCD-patients, in order to determine if there is concordance between tympanometric and electrophysiological findings, as both instrumental tests are suitable for detecting inner ear admittance.
  46 in total

Review 1.  Vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials in patients with dehiscence of the superior semicircular canal.

Authors:  K Brantberg; J Bergenius; A Tribukait
Journal:  Acta Otolaryngol       Date:  1999       Impact factor: 1.494

2.  Symptoms, findings and treatment in patients with dehiscence of the superior semicircular canal.

Authors:  K Brantberg; J Bergenius; L Mendel; H Witt; A Tribukait; J Ygge
Journal:  Acta Otolaryngol       Date:  2001-01       Impact factor: 1.494

3.  Dehiscence of bone overlying the superior canal as a cause of apparent conductive hearing loss.

Authors:  Lloyd B Minor; John P Carey; Phillip D Cremer; Lawrence R Lustig; Sven-Olrik Streubel; Michael J Ruckenstein
Journal:  Otol Neurotol       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 2.311

4.  Clinical experience with impedance audiometry.

Authors:  J Jerger
Journal:  Arch Otolaryngol       Date:  1970-10

5.  Acoustic impedance studies of the normal ear.

Authors:  A S Feldman
Journal:  J Speech Hear Res       Date:  1967-06

6.  Recording of cranio-labyrinthine pressure transmission in man by acoustic impedance method.

Authors:  I Klockhoff; G Anggård; L Anggård
Journal:  Acta Otolaryngol       Date:  1966-04       Impact factor: 1.494

7.  Tympanometric findings in patients with enlarged vestibular aqueducts.

Authors:  Eisuke Sato; Tsutomu Nakashima; David J Lilly; Stephen A Fausti; Hiromi Ueda; Hayato Misawa; Yasue Uchida; Atsushi Furuhashi; Kiyomitsu Asahi; Shinji Naganawa
Journal:  Laryngoscope       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 3.325

8.  Clinical, experimental, and theoretical investigations of the effect of superior semicircular canal dehiscence on hearing mechanisms.

Authors:  John J Rosowski; Jocelyn E Songer; Hideko H Nakajima; Kelly M Brinsko; Saumil N Merchant
Journal:  Otol Neurotol       Date:  2004-05       Impact factor: 2.311

9.  CT evaluation of bone dehiscence of the superior semicircular canal as a cause of sound- and/or pressure-induced vertigo.

Authors:  Clifford J Belden; Noah Weg; Lloyd B Minor; S James Zinreich
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  2003-02       Impact factor: 11.105

10.  Effect of bone-conducted vibration of the midline forehead (Fz) in unilateral vestibular loss (uVL). Evidence for a new indicator of unilateral otolithic function.

Authors:  L Manzari; A M Burgess; I S Curthoys
Journal:  Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 2.124

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  3 in total

1.  The effect of superior canal dehiscence size and location on audiometric measurements, vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials and video-head impulse testing.

Authors:  Andrea Castellucci; Gianluca Piras; Valeria Del Vecchio; Francesco Maria Crocetta; Vincenzo Maiolo; Gian Gaetano Ferri; Angelo Ghidini; Cristina Brandolini
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2020-06-26       Impact factor: 2.503

2.  Superior Semicircular Canal Dehiscence Syndrome - Diagnosis and Surgical Management.

Authors:  Marite Palma Diaz; Juan Carlos Cisneros Lesser; Alfredo Vega Alarcón
Journal:  Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2017-04

3.  Can Wideband Tympanometry Be Used as a Screening Test for Superior Semicircular Canal Dehiscence?

Authors:  Emine Demir; Nazife Nur Afacan; Metin Celiker; Fatma Beyazal Celiker; Mehmet Fatih İnecikli; Suat Terzi; Engin Dursun
Journal:  Clin Exp Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2018-11-22       Impact factor: 3.372

  3 in total

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