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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One hundred patients have been treated over a 13-year period with a transmeatal approach to the internal auditory canal for cochleovestibular neurectomy. Ninety-one of these patients have followup of more than 3 months (average, 4.67 years). The most common indication for the procedure was Meniere's disease (71%). Chronic labyrinthitis, usually following stapes, middle ear, or mastoid surgery, was the next most common indication. Patients with the preoperative diagnosis of Meniere's disease had better results in the curing of vertigo (89%) than those having chronic labyrinthitis (68%). Overall, vertigo was cured in 84% of patients and markedly improved in another 15.1%. Tinnitus was relieved or improved in 65% of all patients and in 67% of patients with Meniere's disease. Mild unsteadiness was commonly noticed postoperatively, but only 11% described this as severe. Eighty percent of these latter patients reported unsteadiness preoperatively. Complications were uncommon and temporary: one case of delayed facial paresis that recovered completely, one CSF leak, and one wound infection. There were no cases of permanent facial paralysis or meningitis. The advantages of the transmeatal approach to the IAC for CVN over labyrinthectomy without CVN are assurance of complete labyrinthine denervation, increased likelihood of improved tinnitus, practice at sectioning the posterior ampullary nerve (PAN), and the ability to inspect the internal auditory canal for a small tumor or other pathology. We recommend this procedure for treatment of unilateral vestibular dysfunction in patients with no serviceable hearing.
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PMID:Long-term results of transmeatal cochleovestibular neurectomy: an analysis of 100 cases. 249 13

Tuberculous osteomyelitis of the temporal bone is a rare and dangerous entity that should be included in the differential diagnoses of infectious processes of the base of skull. A 21-year-old man presented with petrous apicitis, extradural and retromandibular abscesses, and paresis of the facial nerve. Immediate middle fossa craniotomy and drainage of the extradural abscess, in combination with a mastoidectomy, incision and drainage of the facial abscess, and antimicrobial therapy for gram-positive cocci, failed to check the destructive nature of the infection. The patient subsequently developed labyrinthitis, sensorineural hearing loss, and meningitis. Intraoperative biopsy specimens confirmed the presence of tuberculoid granulomas, and the infectious process responded to triple-drug therapy. Tuberculosis of the temporal bone should not always be considered an indolent infection. The management of tuberculous infection of the temporal bone is outlined.
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PMID:Tuberculous petrous apicitis. 400 40

One hundred twenty-six patients who were treated with labyrinthectomy (81 patients) or vestibular neurectomy (45) between the years 1979 and 1994 were reviewed. The cause for vertigo in 124 of the 126 patients was Meniere's disease (89 patients), labyrinthitis (15), delayed endolymphatic hydrops (8), vestibular neuritis (7), and failed labyrinthectomy (5). In the remaining 2 patients, a normal labyrinth was sacrificed to fistulize a petrous apex cyst. Both procedures were equally effective in relieving vertigo (labyrinthectomy 98.8%; neurectomy 97.8%), but the length of hospitalization, length of disability before return to work, and cost were twice as great with vestibular neurectomy than with labyrinthectomy. More patients exhibited prolonged ataxia following neurectomy (5 patients) than after labyrinthectomy (2). Vestibular neurectomy was associated with several complications: reversible facial paresis (15 patients), meningitis (1), cerebrospinal fluid leak (1), and epidural hematoma (1). Labyrinthectomy was complicated by postoperative hyponatremia in 1 patient. Selective vestibular neurectomy preserved hearing in 32 (82%) of 39 patients. Criteria for recommending either ablation procedure are discussed. The incidence of sequential involvement of the contralateral ear was 1.5%.
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PMID:Comparison of labyrinthectomy and vestibular neurectomy in the control of vertigo. 858 59

Because of its distinct anatomy, pathogens can quickly reach the middle ear of a child and cause acute otitis media. Depending on the age of the child, the clinical symptoms can vary from intense earaches, fever, pressure sensation and hearing loss to vomiting, diarrhea and refusal of food by infants. The progression of otitis media through four phases can be observed in an otoscopic examination. To improve Eustachian tube ventilation in uncomplicated cases, nose drops to reduce swelling along with pain therapy are employed first. Antibiotics can be administered to reduce the rate of complications from, for example, mastoiditis, paresis of the facial nerve, and labyrinthitis. In recurrent middle ear infections, an operative therapy should also be considered.
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PMID:[Acute otitis media in childhood]. 1536 65

The author presents the analysis of 56 CT images of the temporal bone in 5 to 72 year old patients operated on the middle ear; characterizes CT possibilities in the study of the operated ear; shows that the operation outcomes may be different (complete epidermization of the postoperative cavity, the presence of the granulation tissue, cholesteatoma recurrence); presents CT changes in the temporal bone in various perioperative and postoperative complications: otoliquorrhea, paresis of the facial nerve, labyrinthitis, progressive hypoacusis and deafness.
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PMID:[Possibilities of temporal bone CT in examination of patients after sanitation operation on the middle ear]. 1603 46

Acute otitis media is one of the most common diagnoses made in children in the United States. Intracranial and extracranial (intratemporal) complications have greatly decreased in the antibiotic era, but still remain a challenge when they arise. This article addresses two intratemporal complications with significant associated morbidity: facial nerve paralysis/paresis, and labyrinthitis. Epidemiology, pathology, clinical diagnosis, and treatment options are discussed, focusing on an evidence-based approach to diagnosis and management. In addition, the future of treatment and current questions regarding otitis media are briefly discussed.
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PMID:Inner ear and facial nerve complications of acute otitis media, including vertigo. 1798 75

Although recent advances in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques have contributed to the detection of tiny lesions in the internal auditory canal (IAC) that may be responsible for sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL), there have been relatively few studies on the clinical characteristics of intra-labyrinthine hemorrhage (ILH) and labyrinthitis versus those regarding IAC tumors. Our purpose was to investigate the frequency of those IAC lesions on MRI and their clinical characteristics. Initial MRIs of 200 patients with SSNHL (93 men, 107 women; mean age = 48.61 years, range: 18-84 years), as well as detailed clinical histories, audiological examinations, and thyroid function, lipid battery, and serological tests (for viral agents and autoimmune disease), were performed. All patients were hospitalized at the time of diagnosis of SSNHL and were administered the same treatment protocol. Patients were divided into idiopathic and secondary groups according to their MRI results. After discharge, they underwent follow-up audiometry and clinical examination at predetermined intervals (2 weeks, 1, 2, 4, and 6 months, and 1 and 2 years). Propensity score-matching and receiver operating characteristics curves of the initial parameters were used for estimating clinical characteristics. Of the 200 patients, 25 (12.55%) who had abnormal findings suggesting inner ear lesions on MRI were assigned to the secondary SSNHL group; within this group, 10 patients (10/200, 5%) had a tumor invading the IAC, 7 (7/200, 3.5%) had ILH, 6 (6/200, 3%) had labyrinthitis, and 2 (1%) had a structural deformity of the IAC. The secondary group showed significantly poor recovery of hearing function compared with that in the idiopathic group. Patients with ILH or labyrinthitis showed prognoses that were equally poor as those of patients with tumors in the secondary group. Additionally, patients with such lesions showed significant canal paresis on the lesion side at an early stage and a high prevalence of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV). In conclusion, the prevalence of non-tumorous lesions on MRI represents common findings and showed a poorer treatment response than that of vestibular Schwannoma in patients with SSNHL. Abnormal canal paresis (cut-off value of 35% on the lesioned side, sensitivity 65.2% and specificity 67%), spontaneous nystagmus directed to the contralesional side, and positional vertigo would be the clinical presentation of SSNHL with IAC lesions, in which the presence of acute prolonged vertigo or positional vertigo compatible with BPPV suggests the possibility of a non-tumorous lesion, such as ILH or a labyrinthitis rather than an IAC tumor.
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PMID:Sudden sensorineural hearing loss associated with inner ear lesions detected by magnetic resonance imaging. 2897 31