Cases reported "Neuroma, Acoustic"

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1/25. Suboccipital resection of a medial acoustic neuroma with hearing preservation.

    BACKGROUND: Many reports indicate that acoustic neuromas greater than 2.0 cm should be removed without hearing preservation attempted, even if hearing is present preoperatively. These studies advocate a translabyrinthine approach because the likelihood of hearing preservation is low. Medial acoustic neuromas, unlike the more common lateral tumors that involve the internal auditory canal, originate medial to that portion of the eighth nerve complex where the cochlear and vestibular nerves are fused. This anatomical feature suggests that these tumors may be amenable to resection with hearing preservation. methods: A patient with a 3.5 cm medial acoustic neuroma and useful preoperative hearing is presented. RESULTS: Gross total tumor removal with functional hearing was achieved after a two-stage procedure using a suboccipital approach. CONCLUSION: Based on the anatomico-pathologic features in this case, we believe that, if a patient has reasonable preoperative hearing (speech discrimination score > 70%) and a medial acoustic neuroma, an approach to preserve hearing should be considered regardless of tumor size.
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ranking = 1
keywords = speech discrimination, discrimination, speech
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2/25. Lesions of the internal auditory canal and cerebellopontine angle in an only hearing ear: is surgery ever advisable?

    OBJECTIVE: To define the indications for surgery in lesions of the internal auditory canal (IAC) and cerebellopontine angle (CPA) in an only hearing ear. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case series. SETTING: Tertiary referral center. patients: Seven patients with lesions of the IAC and CPA who were deaf on the side opposite the lesion. Five patients had vestibular schwannoma (VS), and one each had meningioma and progressive osseous stenosis of the IAC, respectively. The opposite ear was deaf from three different causes: VS (neurofibromatosis type 2 [NF2]), sudden sensorineural hearing loss, idiopathic IAC stenosis. INTERVENTION(S): Middle fossa removal of VS in five, retrosigmoid resection of meningioma in one, and middle fossa IAC osseous decompression in one. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Hearing as measured on pure-tone and speech audiometry. RESULTS: Preoperative hearing was class A in four patients, class B in two, and class C in one. Postoperative hearing was class A in three patients, class B in one, class C in two, and class D in one. CONCLUSIONS: Although the vast majority of neurotologic lesions in an only hearing ear are best managed nonoperatively, in highly selected cases surgical intervention is warranted. Surgical intervention should be considered when one or more of the following circumstances is present: (1) predicted natural history of the disease is relatively rapid loss of the remaining hearing, (2) substantial brainstem compression has evolved (e.g., large acoustic neuroma), and/or (3) operative intervention may result in improvement of hearing or carries relatively low risk of hearing loss (e.g., CPA meningioma).
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ranking = 0.0017148450273719
keywords = speech
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3/25. Enlarged middle fossa vestibular schwannoma surgery: experience with 735 cases.

    OBJECTIVE: To show the clinical outcome in patients with sporadic vestibular schwannoma (VS) operated on by the enlarged middle cranial fossa approach (EMFA). STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case review. SETTING: A tertiary referral center with four neurotologists experienced in EMFA surgery. patients: There were 376 women and 359 men, with a mean age of 51.1 years (range, 12-77). INTERVENTION: Enlarged middle cranial fossa approach surgery. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography scans were used for follow-up and re-evaluation of the operative sites. facial nerve function and hearing were tested. RESULTS: overall complete VS removal was achieved in 97.1% of patients. There were two recurrences (0.3%) after microscopically complete tumor removal. Depending on the tumor size, postoperative normal and near-normal facial outcome ranged from 83% to 99% (average, 92%), and hearing at or near the preoperative level ( /-15 dB pure-tone average or /-15% speech discrimination) was preserved in 60.2%, 48.2%, 23.9%, and 17.6%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The EMFA is an excellent low-morbidity approach for VS removal with limited cerebellopontine angle extension (2 cm). Specific advantages of the EMFA are the superior internal auditory canal exposure, resulting in an extremely low tumor recurrence rate; best capability for hearing preservation; and minimal incidence of cerebrospinal fluid leaks. Postoperative facial function outcome compares with that of other surgical approaches. The best results are achieved in subjects with small tumors and good hearing, advocating early diagnosis and treatment.
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ranking = 1
keywords = speech discrimination, discrimination, speech
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4/25. False-positive magnetic resonance image in the diagnosis of small acoustic neuroma.

    A patient presented with sudden hearing loss on her first visit to our department. gadolinium-DTPA-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the posterior cranial fossa portrayed an intracanalicular tumour image (2-3 mm), and the pure tone average (PTA) and speech discrimination score (SDS) values were 65 dB and 60 per cent, respectively. Surgical intervention to remove the suspected tumour was scheduled by the translabyrinthine approach. Intracanalicular observations by the retrolabyrinthine approach revealed limited oedema on the inferior vestibular nerve with vascular dilation. The tumour image disappeared two years after the operation. Surgical findings and the post-operative course advocate that gadolinium-DTPA-enriched MRI image of an intracanalicular lesion such as arachnoiditis might produce a false-positive result.
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ranking = 1
keywords = speech discrimination, discrimination, speech
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5/25. Vestibular schwannoma: negative growth and audiovestibular features.

    At the University Medical Center Utrecht, non-operative management was used for 44 patients with a unilateral vestibular schwannoma between 1990 and 1997. During that period, consecutive tumor sizes were determined by magnetic resonance imaging. Three of the 44 patients showed an average decrease in tumor size of 16.7% according to American Academy of otolaryngology-head and neck Surgery standards. This study describes the initial vestibular status and audiometric changes measured over up to 10 years in these three patients. Vestibular function was determined once, by means of the bithermal caloric test, the torsion test, the saccade test, the smooth pursuit test, and the registration of spontaneous nystagmus. The three patients had severe vestibular paresis on the affected side. Pure-tone and speech audiometry were performed at regular intervals. Although the size of their tumors decreased, their hearing gradually deteriorated, just as it does in the majority of patients with a growing or stable vestibular schwannoma. The observations presented here suggest that the development of symptoms in a vestibular schwannoma does not differentiate between patients with a stable, growing or shrinking tumor. The development of symptoms may be the result of the same pathogenetic mechanism.
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ranking = 0.0017148450273719
keywords = speech
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6/25. cochlear implantation after acoustic tumour resection in neurofibromatosis type 2: impact of intra- and postoperative neural response telemetry monitoring.

    The present paper reports about a 16-year-old male with neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF-2) of the Wishart type with bilateral deafness who had undergone cochlear implantation after resection of the acoustic neuroma (AN) of the same side. Neural response telemetry (NRT) recordings are essential in those patients during cochlear implantation where no stapedial reflexes can be electrically elicited due to the resection of the AN. In the present case, amplitude growth function and a type II pattern of the NRT waveforms could be well established. The comparison of the N(1) response intra-operatively and after 2 years showed a decline in latency by 50% and an increase in absolute amplitude by 10 times at the same current level of electrical stimulation. This improved auditory nerve transduction suggested a change to a 'faster' encoding strategy to improve speech understanding. The change from SPEAK to ACE 18 months after the operation led to an increase in the open-set sentence recognition test from 52 to 88%. Thus, NRT recordings monitor the intra-operative success of electrode placement and help to assess the integrity of the auditory pathway. Moreover, they can reliably be used in programming the speech processor postoperatively as objective tool. In patients with NF-2, the restoration of hearing can be successfully achieved in several ways. The indications for hearing implants (auditory brain stem and cochlear implants) should be carefully considered with respect to the remaining, functional integrity of the auditory nerve and the technical possibilities to monitor the success of these procedures.
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ranking = 0.0034296900547437
keywords = speech
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7/25. Cochlear implant failure: is an auditory brainstem implant the answer?

    OBJECTIVE: To investigate the auditory rehabilitative results achieved in five patients with cochlear implants (CIs) who subsequently received, due to poor results, auditory brainstem implants (ABIs). MATERIAL AND methods: Between April 1997 and March 2003, 37 patients (age range 14 months to 70 years) were fitted with ABIs in our ENT Department. Fourteen subjects had neurofibromatosis type 2 and 23 were non-tumor patients who had cochlea or cochlear nerve disease. Five subjects had previously been treated with a CI and received an ABI owing to the poor results achieved. One child had bilateral undiagnosed cochlear nerve aplasia and one was suffering from auditory neuropathy; three adults had total cochlear ossification. RESULTS: The open-set sentence recognition score (auditory-only mode) 6-8 months after ABI activation ranged from 0% to 100% in adults. In 1 subject the speech-tracking score was 56 words/min with the ABI. The two children who had achieved no hearing ability with their CI were able to detect sounds and words as early as 3 months after activation of the ABI. CONCLUSION: CI failure as a result of anatomical abnormalities can be remedied by an ABI.
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ranking = 0.0017148450273719
keywords = speech
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8/25. early diagnosis of acoustic neuroma (1989) after experience of 37 cases.

    Although the diagnosis of acoustic neuroma as classically described is generally thought to be easy, this is not always true for this so-called "ear tumor" which is localized within the internal auditory meatus. Recently, remarkable progress has been made in the diagnostic instrumentation and operative techniques used to treat acoustic neuroma, emphasizing the need for early diagnosis so that treatment can take place earlier than before. Through early diagnosis, some cases of total resection of acoustic neuroma have recently become possible, with preservation of not only facial nerve function, but preservation of auditory function as well. In the present report, we outline the early diagnosis of acoustic neuroma by summarizing 37 cases of acoustic neuroma experienced at our institution. We discuss historical presentations, and laboratory tests used in diagnosis including pure tone audiometry, speech audiometry, auditory brainstem evoked response (ABR), vestibular caloric stimulation, and computed tomography (CT) enhanced by introduction of air into the posterior fossa. Two representative cases are also presented. It should be emphasized that no clinical test is 100% sensitive or specific, and attention must be paid to chronological discrepancies in the patient's presentation and "cookbook"-type approaches to evaluation should be avoided.
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ranking = 0.0017148450273719
keywords = speech
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9/25. Neurotologic disease in four patients with normal audiometric findings.

    Clinical suspicion remains an underlying diagnostic clue in the evaluation of patients with unconfirmed acoustic neuromas. This is particularly true when initial otologic and audiologic evaluations are equivocal. This paper summarizes a series of four patients each who demonstrated normal audiometric (pure-tone and conventional speech audiometry) and/or ABR findings in the presence of surgically confirmed intracanalicular or cerebellopontine angle tumors. Three of the patients presented with evidence of "classical" acoustic tumors, whereas the fourth patient revealed a benign internal auditory canal capillary hemangioma. Audiologic evaluation, ABR measures, and MRI scanning demonstrate the relationships observed in each of the four patients. Diagnostic strategies illustrate the importance of cross-check principles (audiologic, electrophysiologic, and imaging techniques) in the diagnosis of posterior fossa tumors. The presence of normal pure-tone thresholds should not discourage the pursuit of additional diagnostic measures if clinical suspicion remains a factor in comprehensive patient management.
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ranking = 0.0017148450273719
keywords = speech
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10/25. Middle fossa decompression of the internal auditory canal in acoustic neuroma surgery: a therapeutic alternative.

    Unilateral acoustic neuromas in only-hearing ears and bilateral acoustic neuromas (NF-2) are separate entities, but both pose a common problem because surgical removal has the potential to leave the patient totally deafened. A middle fossa decompression of the internal auditory canal (IAC) was performed in 8 patients (5 with NF-2 tumors and 3 with neuromas in an only-hearing ear). In 5 of the 8, the speech discrimination scores at the 6-month follow-up were better than preoperative scores. After 6 months, however, hearing regressed at variable rates. Although not a definitive therapeutic treatment, decompression of the IAC appears to improve and perhaps prolong useful hearing, which gains valuable time for rehabilitation. Rigid follow-up by computed tomography scans or magnetic resonance imaging is essential.
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ranking = 1
keywords = speech discrimination, discrimination, speech
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