| Literature DB >> 28984171 |
Zhaohui Liu1, Jingge Yu2, Pengfei Zhao3, Hanjuan Zhang1, Qian Wang1, Zhenchang Wang3.
Abstract
We herein report a newly described cause of venous pulsatile tinnitus: protrusion of an aberrant sylvian vein into the tympanum. A 60-year-old woman presented with a 4-month history of objective persistent pulsatile tinnitus in the right ear with no other complaints. The pulsatile tinnitus diminished with rotation of the head to the right side or by compression of the right cervical vascular structures. The frequency and intensity of the tinnitus were 125 Hz and 20 dB HL, respectively. Audiometry and otoscopic examination findings were normal. Radiologic examination showed that the right sylvian vein protruded into the tympanum through the dehiscent anterior cortical plate of the tympanum.Entities:
Keywords: Pulsatile tinnitus; computed tomography; sylvian vein; tympanum
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28984171 PMCID: PMC5718713 DOI: 10.1177/0300060517693422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Med Res ISSN: 0300-0605 Impact factor: 1.671
Figure 1.Axial high-resolution CT showed protrusion of a soft tissue shadow in the right middle cranial fossa into the tympanum through the dehiscent anterior cortical plate of the tympanum.
Figure 2.Axial (a) T2- and (b) T1-weighted MR images showed flow void protruding from the right middle cranial fossa into the tympanum.
Figure 3.(a) Axial and (b) oblique venous-phase CT images showed that the right sylvian vein traveled through the bottom of the temporal lobe and protruded into the tympanum through a defect in the anterior cortical plate of the tympanum.