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Query: UMLS:C0042571 (vertigo)
7,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is a devastating disease that is affecting the human population in epidemic numbers. Patients with AIDS are known to have a significant incidence of otologic disease, including hearing loss, vertigo, tinnitus, otalgia, and infection with unusual pathogens. There has been no previous work on the histopathology of this disease. Ten temporal bones from five patients who were seropositive for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the causative retrovirus of AIDS, were obtained. Seven specimens were analyzed using light microscopic techniques. Electron microscopy was performed on selected areas of pathology. A myriad of pathologic findings was seen, including severe petrositis with marrow replacement, mastoiditis, otitis media, ossicular destruction, precipitations in the perilymphatic and endolymphatic spaces of the vestibule and of the semicircular canals, and subepithelial elevation of the neurosensory epithelium of the saccule and utricle. The organ of Corti was relatively free of pathologic change. Many of the otologic symptoms encountered in these patients can be explained by the findings in this study. Further investigation using light and electron microscopy, and immunohistochemical techniques, is urged.
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PMID:Histopathologic and ultrastructural changes in the temporal bones of HIV-infected human adults. 160 48

Pediatric neurotology is a subspecialty encompassing the medical and surgical treatment of conditions involving the middle ear, inner ear and lateral skull base. Multiple otologic and neurotologic diseases exist. In the pediatric patient the most common neurotologic conditions are vertigo, complications of otitis media, cholesteatoma, hearing loss and facial paralysis. Vertigo is differentiated into peripheral and central vestibular abnormalities. Peripheral vestibular causes include Meniere's disease, benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, vestibular neuronitis, otitis media and labyrinthitis. The predominant lesions in our field causing central vestibular disorders are brainstem and posterior fossa tumors. Mastoiditis, meningitis, petrositis, sigmoid sinus thrombosis, extradural abscess, brain abscess, otitic hydrocephalus, cholesteatoma and cholesterol granuloma are complications of otitis media and middle ear disease. Sensorineural hearing loss is now readily treated with cochlear implantation. Facial nerve paralysis may result from infectious and other etiologies.
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PMID:Pediatric neurotology. 1499 62