Retrospective Analysis of the Association of a Small Vestibular Aqueduct with Cochleovestibular Symptoms in a Large, Single-Center Cohort Undergoing CT.

AJNR Am J Neuroradiol

From the Department of Radiology (K.B., L.V.R., M.J.B., A.F.J., H.D.C., K.L.R.), Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Boston, Massachusetts

Published: January 2023

Background And Purpose: Temporal bones in some patients with Ménière disease have demonstrated small vestibular aqueducts; however, the prevalence and clinical importance of small vestibular aqueducts remain unclear in patients without Ménière disease. This study correlates the presence of a small vestibular aqueduct with cochleovestibular symptoms.

Materials And Methods: Consecutive temporal bone CTs in adults from January to December 2020 were reviewed. The midpoint vestibular aqueduct size in the 45°-oblique Pöschl view was measured by 2 reviewers independently in 684 patients (1346 ears). Retrospective chart review for the clinical diagnosis of Ménière disease, the presence of cochleovestibular symptoms, and indications for CT was performed.

Results: Fifty-two of 684 patients (7.6% of patients, 62/1346 ears) had small vestibular aqueducts. Twelve patients (15/1346 ears) had Ménière disease. Five of 12 patients with Ménière disease (5 ears) had a small vestibular aqueduct. There was a significant correlation between a small vestibular aqueduct and Ménière disease ( < .001). There was no statistical difference between the small vestibular aqueduct cohort and the cohort with normal vestibular aqueducts (0.3-0.7 mm) regarding tinnitus ( = .06), hearing loss ( = .88), vertigo ( = .26), dizziness ( = .83), and aural fullness ( = .61).

Conclusions: While patients with Ménière disease were proportionately more likely to have a small vestibular aqueduct than patients without Ménière disease, the small vestibular aqueduct was more frequently seen in patients without Ménière disease and had no correlation with hearing loss, vertigo, dizziness, or aural fullness. We suggest that the finding of a small vestibular aqueduct on CT could be reported by radiologists as a possible finding in Ménière disease, but it remains of uncertain, and potentially unlikely, clinical importance in the absence of symptoms of Ménière disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9835903PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A7734DOI Listing

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