Preoperative diagnosis with multimodal approaches might lead to overtreatment. Cautious understanding of cytology and dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging is required when a Kuttner tumor is cited as differential diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Dizziness or vertigo is associated with both vestibular-balance and psychological factors. A common assessment tool is the Vertigo Symptom Scale (VSS) -short form, which has two subscales: vestibular-balance and autonomic-anxiety. Despite frequent use, the factor structure of the VSS-short form has yet to be confirmed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Arch Otorhinolaryngol
December 2011
To evaluate whether neuro-otological tests have clinical significance in psychiatric patients with nystagmus who have inner ear and/or brain dysfunction, we performed neuro-otological tests on 56 psychiatric patients with nystagmus (38 men, 18 women) (age range 40-97; mean age ± SD 61.6 ± 10.5 years).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo evaluate whether nystagmus has clinical significance in psychiatric patients who have functional and/or organic brain dysfunction. We performed gaze, positional and positioning nystagmus tests on 227 patients with psychiatric diseases (144 men, 83 women, with an average age +/- SD of 62.5 +/- 14.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To evaluate the function of the postoperative auditory nerve preserved after translabyrinthine (TL) vestibular schwannoma (VS) removal.
Methods: Fifteen patients, who underwent unilateral VS resection via a TL approach, were preserved auditory nerve anatomically. The size and location of VS were measured on MRI preoperatively.
Objective: To determine the extent of audiometric correlation with CT findings.
Methods: Forty-four patients (82 ears) with surgically confirmed otosclerosis underwent preoperative CT examination. Based on the computed tomography (CT) findings, the ears were classified into five groups as follows: Group A, the group with no pathological CT findings; Group B1, the group with demineralization localized in the region of the fissula antefenestram; Group B2, the group with demineralization extending towards the cochleariform process from the anterior region of the oval window; Group B3, the group with extensive demineralization surrounding the cochlea; and Group C, the group with thick anterior and posterior calcified plaques.
Nihon Jibiinkoka Gakkai Kaiho
February 2002
Enlarged vestibular aqueduct (EVA) is an inner ear anomaly occasionally associated with sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) and/or dizziness. Recent genetic studies indicate that mutations in the PDS gene may cause EVA. A 10-year-old EVA patient who had undergone annual hearing tests for 7 years had an aunt and cousin who also had hearing loss and EVA, so genetic examinations were conducted for a possible genetic link.
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