| Literature DB >> 35893388 |
Alessandro Vinciguerra1, Mario Turri-Zanoni2, Benjamin Verillaud1, Jean-Pierre Guichard3, Luca Spirito2, Apostolos Karligkiotis2, Paolo Castelnuovo2, Philippe Herman1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Petrous apex cholesterol granuloma (PACG) is a lesion that can give rise to different symptoms, and correlations with etiopathology are ambiguous. The aim of this study is to analyze the association between PACG symptoms and radiological findings at presentation, in order to establish a reproduceable pre-operative radiological evaluation and guide the surgical indication.Entities:
Keywords: cholesterol granuloma; petrous apex; sphenoid sinus; temporal bone; trans-nasal approach
Year: 2022 PMID: 35893388 PMCID: PMC9330305 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11154297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1Coronal T2-weighted MRI demonstrating compression of the temporal lobe and Meckel’s cave region (white arrow) by cholesterol granuloma of the petrous apex.
Figure 2Axial CT scan showing compression of the Eustachian tube by a cholesterol granuloma (white arrow).
Figure 3Axial CT scan showing erosion of the anterior wall of internal auditory canal (white arrow).
Figure 4Axial CT scan showing erosion of the right cochlear basal turn (white arrow) by a cholesterol granuloma.
Figure 5Axial T2-weighted MRI showing indirect compression of Dorello’s canal (white arrow) by a cholesterol granuloma of the petrous apex.
Figure 6CT scan in the axial (A) and coronal (B) planes of the jugular tubercle (white arrow) defined as the bony convexity medial to the jugular foramen just above the hypoglossal canal (in axial sections) or the bony part just above the hypoglossal canal (in coronal sections).
Pre-surgical symptoms of patients affected with cholesterol granuloma of the apex petrous. In some patients, more than one symptom was referred.
| Pre-Surgical Symptom | No. N = 29 | % |
|---|---|---|
| Headache | 20 | 69% |
| Fainting | 7 | 24.1% |
| Diplopia | 6 | 20.7% |
| Otitis Media | 5 | 17.2% |
| Vestibular symptoms | 4 | 13.8% |
| Facial paresthesia | 3 | 10.3% |
| Hearing loss | 3 | 10.3% |
| Tinnitus | 1 | 3.4% |
| Asymptomatic | 1 | 3.4% |
Association between referred pre-surgical symptoms and radiologic structures involved with Fisher’s exact test and Cramer’s V index; significant results are shown in bold.
|
|
|
|
|
| Headache | Temporal lobe/posterior fossa compression |
| 0.444 |
| Meckel’s cave compression | - | ||
| Fainting | Jugular tubercule erosion |
| 0.722 |
| Diplopia | Dorello canal compression |
| 0.653 |
| Otitis Media | Eustachian tube compression | - | |
| Vestibular symptoms | Internal auditory canal erosion |
| 0.536 |
| Facial paresthesia | Meckel’s cave compression |
| 0.468 |
| Hearing loss | Cochlear basal turn erosion | - | |
| Internal auditory canal erosion | - | ||
| Tinnitus | Cochlear basal turn erosion |
| 1.00 |
| Internal auditory canal erosion | - |
* only one patient of our cohort experienced tinnitus.