| Literature DB >> 28878303 |
Woongsang Sunwoo1, Yung Jin Jeon2, Yun Jung Bae3, Jeong Hun Jang4, Ja-Won Koo2, Jae-Jin Song5.
Abstract
Although neurovascular compression of the cochlear nerve (NVC-C) presenting as typewriter tinnitus is a discrete disease category, verified diagnostic criteria are lacking. We sought to refine the diagnostic criteria for NVC-C by reference to a relatively large case series. The medical records of 22 NVC-C patients were retrospectively reviewed. Psychoacoustic characteristics, the results of diagnostic work-up (including audiovestibular neurophysiological tests and radiological evaluations), and the initial treatment response to carbamazepine were investigated. All subjects described their tinnitus as a typical "typewriter" or "staccato" sound. Of the 22 subjects, 11 (50%) had histories of vertiginous spells, but none had ipsilesional hearing loss. Vestibular function tests in 11 subjects tested revealed only 2 (18.2%) isolated cervical vestibular evoked myogenic potential abnormalities. Radiological comparisons of the symptomatic and asymptomatic sides, regarding the type of the vascular loop and neurovascular contact, revealed no significant differences. However, all 22 subjects exhibited immediate and marked responses to short-term carbamazepine treatment. Meticulous history-taking in terms of the psychoacoustic characteristics and the response to initial carbamazepine, are more reliable diagnostic clues than are radiological or neurophysiological data in NVC-C subjects. Therefore, the typical psychoacoustic characteristics and the response to initial carbamazepine should be included in the diagnostic criteria.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28878303 PMCID: PMC5587715 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-10798-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The types of AICA loops. (a) Type I loop is lying within the CPA (arrow) but not entering the IAC. (b) Type II loop is entering the IAC (arrow) within <50% of the length of the IAC. (c) Type III loop is extending into more than 50% of the IAC (arrow).
Figure 2The types of neurovascular contact. (a) There is no neurovascular contact (arrow), which is classified as type I. (b) Type II shows neurovascular contact (arrow) between AICA and cochleovestibular nerve without angulation/indentation of the nerve. (c) Arrow indicates the angulation/indentation of cochleovestibular nerve by AICA loop in type III.
Raw Data for 22 Cases of Typewriter Tinnitus.
| Case No. | Sex/Age | Side | Duration of history (months) | Vertigo | Hearing impairment, MHL (dB HL) | Facial spasm | Carbamazepine responsiveness | MRI findings | Vestibular dysfunction | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AICA loop typea | Contact typeb | Caloric, CP (%) | oVEMP/cVEMP | Rotational chair test | ||||||||
| 1 | F/31 | R | 0.75 | − | −, 3 | − | +, CR | I | III | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 2 | F/52 | L | 0.5 | + | −, 16 | − | +, PR | II | I | −, 4 | −/+ | − |
| 3 | M/47 | L | 0.75 | + | −, 10 | + | +, PR | I | III | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 4 | F/43 | R | 7 years | + | +, 45 | − | +, PR | I | II | −, 11 | −/− | − |
| 5 | F/58 | R | 3 | + | −/8 | − | +, PR | II | II | −, 17 | −/− | N/A |
| 6 | F/84 | L | 1 | − | +, 45 | − | +, PR | I | I | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 7 | M/77 | L | 8 | − | +, 53 | + | +, PR | I | I | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 8 | M/39 | L | 6 | − | −, 3 | − | +, PR | III | II | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 9 | M/65 | R/L | 10 years | − | −, 21/+, 30 | + | +, PR | II, II | II, I | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 10 | F/72 | L | 5 | + | +, 28 | − | +, PR | I | II | −, 0 | N/A | − |
| 11 | F/40 | L | 1 year | − | −, 5 | − | +, PR | I | I | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 12 | F/51 | R | 2 | + | −, 8 | − | +, PR | N/A | N/A | −, 3 | N/A | − |
| 13 | F/56 | R | 2 years | − | −, 12 | − | +, PR | N/A | N/A | −, 4 | N/A | − |
| 14 | F/27 | R | 6 | − | −, 10 | − | +, PR | N/A | N/A | −, 4 | −/+ | − |
| 15 | F/56 | L | 4 | + | −, 3 | − | +, PR | I | II | −, 1 | −/− | N/A |
| 16 | F/23 | R | 1 | + | −, 0 | + | +, PR | I | I | −, 16 | −/− | − |
| 17 | F/66 | R | 2 | + | −, 8 | − | +, PR | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 18 | M/45 | R | 6 | + | −, 5 | − | +, PR | N/A | N/A | N/A | −/− | N/A |
| 19 | F/34 | L | N/A | − | −, 6 | − | +, PR | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 20 | F/49 | R | 1 | − | −, 18 | − | +, CR | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 21 | F/54 | L | 1.5 | + | −, 14 | − | +, CR | II | III | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 22 | F/58 | L | 1 year | − | −, 8 | + | +, PR | I | II | −, 13 | −/− | N/A |
MHL, mean hearing level, the average hearing threshold at 0.5, 1, 2, and 3 kHz; AICA, anterior-inferior cerebellar artery; CP, canal paresis; CR, complete remission; PR, partial remission; N/A, not available.
aThe type of AICA loop according to Chavda classification[23].
bThe type of neurovascular contact according to Gultekin and colleagues’ classification[24].
Modified diagnostic criteria for neurovascular compression of the cochlear nerve (NVC-C).
| Consider diagnosis when paroxysmal, short-lasting tinnitus observed. |
| a. Staccato character (tapping, clicking, or crackling in nature) |
| b. Typically, unilateral, but bilateral involvement can also be seen. |
| 1. Responsiveness to low-dose carbamazepine (200–400 mg/day) |
| a. Prompt tinnitus improvement (within 2 weeks) |
| b. When the medication is stopped, the symptoms may recur. |
| 2. Associated ipsilateral symptoms |
| a. Paroxysmal vertiginous spells |
| b. Hemifacial spasms |
| 3. Supportive criteria – positive auditory evoked potential using Moller’s criteria[ |
| a. Commonly normal before 2 years of symptoms |
| b. Ipsilateral interpeak latency I-III ≥ 2.3 ms |
| c. Reduced peak II amplitude <33% |
| 4. Exclusionary criteria for NVC-C |
| a. Tumor of the cerebellopontine angle or internal auditory canal on MRI |
| b. Demyelination disease on cerebral MRI |
| 5. Positive MRI for vascular conflict have no diagnostic specificity. |