Cochlea Project Flashcards

1
Q

Main points:

A
  • Cochlear hyperintensity on T1 is more common in preterm than term patients
  • This hyperintensity is potentially associated with hearing loss
  • Cochlea should be scrutinized in premature infants
  • Signal alterations should prompt early ENT referral for potential treatment
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2
Q

Weissman, Jane, Hugh, Curtin: High Signal from the Otic Labyrinth on Unenhanced MRI

A
  • 2 Case reports showing increased precontrast T1 signal in labyrinth (associated with hearing loss) - in adults
  • Presumed hemorrhage (although no histologic proof)
  • Discusses other potential causes of high signal: elevated protein content, fat, slow flow.
  • Things that this article does that you should too:
    • Defines what T1 bright means (normally the labyrinth is low on T1 - intermetdiate b/w CSF and brain - high signal is hyperintense to contralateral labyrinth and iso to adjacent cerebellum) (this doesn’t make sense?) but they do use ROI signal intensity measurements (should we do that?) - seems more quantitative?
    • Reference: experimental venous occlusion in animals has been shown to cause hemorrhage into perilymphatic/endolymphatic spaces (Perlman, Kimura - Experimental Obstruction of venous drainage and arterial supply…)
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3
Q

Casselman: Pathology of the Membranous Labyrinth

A

Value of Non-Con T1 in differntiating labyrinthitis from proteinaceous fluid/subacute hemorrhage

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4
Q

Tan: Deafness due to hemorrhageic labyrinthitis…

A

Shows that bright signal can be related to suppurative labyrinthitis .

  • References: Animal studies/electrophysiological studies demonstrating cochlea as site of lesion - S.Suis entering the perilymph via the cochlear aqueduct through lytic actions of exotoxins
    *
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5
Q

Tarlow: Endotoxin induced damage to the cochlea in guinea pigs

A

Showed that bacterial endotoxin can damage cochlea in guinea pigs

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6
Q

Bachor: The cochlear aqueduct in pediatric temporal bones

A
  1. Cochlear aqueduct connects perilymphatic space of basal turn of cochlea with subarachnoid space of the posterior cranial cavity.
  2. The cochlear aqueduct has been shown to be patent in newborns.
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7
Q

Shogo Shinohara: Clinical features of sudden hearing loss…

A
  • 5 case reports of sudden hearing loss with increased signal unenhanced T1
  • Good info: reference #3 (Pathology of the ear by Schuknecht) - can’t find - basically two things:
    • Spontaneous hemorrhage into the inner ear occurs as a complication of bleeding disorders (bleeding diathesis) most commonly leukemia - confirmed on histological studies.
    • Red blood corpuscles typically have a life span of 120 days in the vascular system, but in 2 cases, increased signal lasted for 6 months. This same reference showed that in experimental animals, red blood corpuscles were shown to have an extended lifespan of more than 5 months in perilymphatic fluid. (may be why signal was longer than expected)
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8
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A
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