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Inner Ear – Introduction

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Hi. My name is Dave Yousem,

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and I am a professor of Neuroradiology at the

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Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

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If you've been following along with the mastery courses,

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you know that we've previously looked at the external

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ear and the external auditory canal as one course.

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We did a second course on the middle ear anatomy and

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pathology, and we've come to the final temporal bone

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and session, and that is on the inner ear.

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So let's dive right in. With inner ear imaging,

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we have dominated with CT scanning for

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the pathology of the inner ear.

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MRI is usually complementary to CT in identifying

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the membranous labyrinth,

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the nerves themselves, and the various pathology

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associated with the internal auditory canal.

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Now, the internal auditory canal has

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already been addressed by

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Dr. Mukherjee, so we will just be dealing with

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the inner ear proper in this course.

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The techniques that we use are

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high-resolution CT scanning.

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The CT scanning is typically done in the axial plane

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with submillimeter-thin slices that are then

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reconstructed with multiplanar reconstructions

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in the coronal and sagittal planes. That said,

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you can do reconstructions with the 3D dataset in any

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plane, and those are employed in particular when looking

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for superior semicircular canal dehiscence syndrome,

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in which case, we have spiral reconstructions

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around the superior semicircular canal.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Temporal bone

Neuroradiology

MRI

Idiopathic

Head and Neck

CT

Brain

Acquired/Developmental

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