Publications by authors named "Kensuke Kiyomizu"

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.

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Background: 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.

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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).

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To 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.

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Objective: 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.

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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.

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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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