| Literature DB >> 29312118 |
Eugen Constant Ionescu1, Nasser Al Tamami1, Alexandra Neagu1, Aicha Ltaief-Boudrigua2, Stephane Gallego3, Ruben Hermann4, Eric Truy4,5,6, Hung Thai-Van1,5,6.
Abstract
A 60-year-old man was referred to the ENT department for intense episodic vertigo triggered by loud sounds. Pure tone audiometry and otoneurological assessment, including videonystagmography using auditory stimulation and cervical vestibular evoked myogenic potential measures, conducted to the hypothesis of a third window syndrome in the left ear. Results from the high-resolution computed tomography of the petrous bone confirmed the hypothesis and revealed the presence of a submillimeter semicircular canal dehiscence, located between the left lateral and superior semicircular canal ampullae on the left side.Entities:
Keywords: ampullar dehiscence; sound-induced falls; superior canal dehiscence syndrome; third window syndrome; tullio phenomenon
Year: 2017 PMID: 29312118 PMCID: PMC5742101 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1(A) Pure tone audiometry results before surgery showing a bilateral characteristic noise induced neurosensorial hearing loss on high frequencies. (B) Pure tone audiometry postsurgery results showing a 15–20 dB decrease in the left ear thresholds from 250 to 1,000 Hz and in the right ear at 3,000 and 6,000 Hz.
Figure 2(A) Cervical vestibular-evoked myogenic potentiels (cVEMPs) before surgery with abnormal low threshold at 70 dBnHL in the left ear with a 750 Hz tone burst stimulation. Normal threshold VEMPs in the fright ear at 95 dBHL. (B) cVEMPs after surgery: threshold increased to 80 dBnHL on the left side. Normal threshold at 95 dBnHL on the right ear.
Figure 3Left temporal bone high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) demonstrates by its shape and topography (white arrows) an original ampullar dehiscence of the superior semicircular canal. The infra-millimetric (~0.5 mm) and tubular in shape dehiscence was disposed between the ampullaes of the lateral and superior semicircular canal and the medial epitympanic wall. An important pneumatization of perilabyrinthine air cells was observed [yellow arrows (A,B,D,E)]. (A,B) axial left temporal CT scan. (C) Reformatted image of the left labyrinth (oblique coronal). (D) Reformatted image of the left labyrinth (oblique sagittal). (E) Reformatted image of the left labyrinth (oblique sagittal). The ampullar dehiscence on the left superior semicircular canal’s anterior crus was visible on two perpendicular planes [axial (A,B), coronal plane (C), Pöschl plane (D), and in oblique sagittal plane (E)]. Its diameter was measured between 0.4 and 0.5 mm.