Translabyrinthine vestibular schwannoma resection with simultaneous cochlear implantation.

Cochlear Implants Int

a Department of Otolaryngology - Head & Neck Surgery , Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine , 1200 East Broad Street, West Hospital, 12th Floor, South Wing, Suite 313, PO Box 980146, Richmond , VA 23298-0146 , USA.

Published: September 2017

Objectives: (1) Report a rare case of translabyrinthine resection of a sporadic vestibular schwannoma (VS) and concurrent cochlear implantation (CI). (2) Discuss pre-, intra-, and post-operative considerations in this unique patient population. (3) Describe surgical and audiologic outcomes reported in this population.

Methods: Case report and review of the literature. PubMed search 'Cochlear Implantation'[Mesh] AND ('Neuroma, Acoustic'[Mesh] OR 'VESTIBULAR SCHWANNOMA'[All Fields] OR 'SCHWANNOMA'[All Fields]) limited to humans and English language. Returned 64 search results, abstracts and references of relevant papers reviewed.

Results: A 75-year-old male with longstanding history of slowly progressive severe hearing loss and tinnitus presented for evaluation of worsening imbalance, vertigo, and nausea. Workup revealed a 7 mm right intracanalicular mass on MRI concerning for vestibular schwannoma. Audiogram showed bilateral, symmetric, severe-to-profound sensorineural hearing loss, with poor open-set speech comprehension while bilaterally aided. He underwent successful concurrent right translabyrinthine resection of his VS with complete preservation of the cochlear nerve and uncomplicated cochlear implantation.

Discussion: Literature review revealed few previous reports of simultaneous VS and CI. The vast majority of these were in patients with neurofibromatosis Type 2 in whom auditory outcomes were poor. This patient represents one of the few cases of concurrent translabyrinthine tumor removal and CI for a spontaneous VS.

Conclusion: Single-stage cochlear implantation and translabyrinthine tumor resection is a feasible and safe option to consider for auditory rehabilitation in rare situations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14670100.2017.1337665DOI Listing

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