Interactive Transcript
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Let's evaluate this patient who has bilateral
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congenital sensorineural hearing loss.
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So as always,
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I'm going to start with the external auditory canal
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and make sure that there's no atresia of it.
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There seems to be a bit of wax in this person's
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external auditory canal, on the left side.
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I'll next look at the middle ear ossicles, and we have
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our normal ice cream and ice cream cone, and then the
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parallel lines of the neck of the malleus
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and long process of the incus.
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And we see the incudostapedial joint, and we have
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seen very nicely the footplate of the stapes here
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on the right side, and on the left side,
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similar anatomy with the footplate of the stapes
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inserting in the oval window.
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So the oval window looks good.
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And then I move to the inner ear structures.
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Having cleared the middle ear structures again,
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what's our most common cause of congenital
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sensorineural hearing loss?
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It's enlarged vestibular aqueduct.
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So as we look at our vestibular aqueduct,
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we see this massive enlargement of the vestibular
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aqueduct when we compare it to the lateral
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semicircular canal caliber.
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And we see that that's present actually bilaterally
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with a very large vestibular
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aqueduct on the left side,
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which is three to four times larger than the caliber
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of the lateral semicircular canal or
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the posterior semicircular canal.
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Having looked at that and identified it,
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we want to make sure that we look for the other
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potential findings that are associated
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with an enlarged vestibular aqueduct,
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and that is incomplete partitian type 2.
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Now, the enlarged vestibular aqueduct can occur in
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isolation and may be a source of congenital sensorineural
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hearing loss in and of itself.
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However, it does have that association with incomplete
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development of the cochlea.
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As we look at the cochlea on the left side,
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we identify the round window and
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the basal turn of the cochlea.
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And then we come into this bulbous area which is
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not separating into middle and apical turns.
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And this is that Mondini malformation that is
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associated with the endolymphatic sac enlargement
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in incomplete partitian type 2.
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On the contralateral side, the left hand side,
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we have a similar finding.
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We have a good basal turn,
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we've got some development of the modiolus,
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but at the middle and apical turns we really don't
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have any of the bony separations of these turns.
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And hence we can make the diagnosis
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of incomplete partitian type 2.
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