| Literature DB >> 29770122 |
Zhong Liqun1, Kee-Hong Park2, Hyo-Jung Kim3, Sun-Uk Lee4, Jeong-Yoon Choi4, Ji-Soo Kim4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Labyrinthine infarction is a cause of acute audiovestibulopathy, but can be diagnosed only in association with other infarctions involving the brainstem or cerebellar areas supplied by the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) since current imaging techniques cannot visualize an infarction confined to the labyrinth. This case series aimed to establish embolic labyrinthine infarction as a mechanism of isolated acute audiovestibulopathy.Entities:
Keywords: embolism; hearing loss; infarction; inner ear; vertigo
Year: 2018 PMID: 29770122 PMCID: PMC5940739 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00311
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1MRIs of the patients. Patients showed single or multiple acute infarctions in the cerebral hemispheres (arrows) or cerebellum concurrent with acute audiovestibulopathy.
Figure 2Combined audiovestibulopathy due to cardiac septic embolism. This 42-year-old woman (patient 1) with right audiovestibulopathy from cardiac septic embolism shows tender maculopapular rashes in both feet (A), multiple scattered retinal hemorrhages with a white center (Roth spots, arrow heads) in both eyes (B), left beating nystagmus after horizontal head-shaking [(C), H = horizontal position of the left eye, V = vertical position of the left eye, T = torsional position of the left eye. In each recording, upward deflection indicates rightward, upward, and clockwise eye motion.] Patient 1 showed right caloric paresis of 81% [(D), SPV = slow phase velocity], complete hearing loss in the right ear (E), and gadolinium enhancements of the vestibule, cochlea, and semicircular canals [insets, (F)].
Figure 3Isolated vestibulopathy in patient 3 with patent foramen ovale. (A) Video-oculography shows spontaneous nystagmus beating leftward, upward, and counterclockwise without fixation. H = horizontal position of the left eye, V = vertical position of the left eye, T = torsional position of the left eye. In each recording, upward deflection indicates rightward, upward, and clockwise eye motion. (B) Rightward ocular torsion is observed on fundus photos (normal range = 0–12.6O, positive values indicate an extorsion). (C) Bithermal caloric tests documented complete right canal paralysis. SPV = slow phase velocity, PSPV = peak SPV. (D) Ocular vestibular-evoked myogenic potential show no wave formation during right ear stimulation. (E) Pure-tone audiometry shows symmetric responses between the ears (Lt = left, Rt = right).
Clinical findings of the patients.
| Pt | Age/sex | Embolic source | Vestibular Sx | Auditory Sx | HIT | Caloric paresis | Hearing loss (pure-tone average | Onset-to-MRIs | Concomitant infarctions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F/42 | Cardiac septic vegetation | Vertigo | Tinnitus/hearing loss, right | Right | Right (81%) | Right (18 dB) | Within 5 days | Inferior frontal (MCA–ACA borderzone, left) and occipital (PCA, right) periventricular white matter |
| 2 | M/68 | Coronary angioplasty | Vertigo/nausea | Hearing loss, left | Left | Left (46%) | Left (69 dB) | 2 h | Precentral gyrus (ACA, right; MCA, left), occipitotemporal gyrus (PCA, bilateral) |
| 3 | M/73 | PFO | Vertigo | – | Right | Right (100%) | Normal | 6 days | Parahippocampal gyrus (PCA, left) |
| 4 | F/60 | VA occlusion, right, V4 stenosis, left (>70%) | Vertigo | – | Right | Normal | Normal | 5 h | Parahippocampal gyrus (PCA, right) |
| 5 | M/38 | PFO | Vertigo/unsteadiness | Tinnitus/hearing loss, right | Normal | Right (82%) | Right (63 dB) | 2 days | Cerebellum (PICA, bilateral) |
| 6 | M/76 | Atrial fibrillation | Dizziness/unsteadiness | Tinnitus/hearing loss, left | Normal | Right (84%) | Left (36 dB) | 1 day | Cerebellum (PICA, left) |
| 7 | M/44 | PFO | Dizziness | Tinnitus/hearing loss, right | Normal | None | Right (30 dB) | 3 days | Cerebellum (PICA, bilateral) |
| 8 | M/75 | Atrial fibrillation | Vertigo | – | Normal | Right (63%) | Normal | 7 h | Lingual, parahippocampal gyrus (PCA, right), cerebellum (PICA, right) |
| 9 | M/45 | MS | Dizziness | Hearing loss, left | Left | Left (73%) | Left (68 dB) | 4 months | Cerebellum (SCA, bilateral) |
| 10 | M/51 | VA dissection without stenosis | Vertigo | Hearing loss, right | Right | Right (72%) | Right (15 dB) | 7 h | LMI, right |
ACA, anterior cerebral artery; HIT, head-impulse tests; LMI, lateral medullary infarction; MCA, middle cerebral artery; MS, mitral stenosis; PFO, patent foramen ovale; PCA, posterior cerebral artery; PICA, posterior inferior cerebellar artery; Pt, patient; SCA, superior cerebellar artery; Sx, symptoms; VA, vertebral artery.
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Figure 4Algorithm for management of acute audiovestibulopathy and concurrent acute infarctions in the non-anterior inferior cerebellar artery (non-AICA) territories.