Interactive Transcript
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This was a patient who presented several days
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after a traumatic event with a blow to the
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occipital region and temporal
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region on the right side.
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The patient had conductive hearing loss in the
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clinic and was sent for temporal bone CT.
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This is a relatively subtle case in which
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because it was not an acute fracture,
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and what you see is an irregularity
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along the temporal bone,
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which is coursing right along this plane right here.
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Here you can see the little small fracture line
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along the mastoid portion of the temporal bone
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that was indicative of the fracture.
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And there may have been a little bit of
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irregularity along the anterior margin
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of the external auditory canal.
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Sometimes you will see these little lines of the...
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these lines along the
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anterior margin of the external auditory canal.
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They don't necessarily represent fractures.
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It could just be some fissures.
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But the important finding here was not so much
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the fracture as it was a,
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look at the middle ear ossicles.
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So when we look at the middle ear ossicles,
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what we see is a gap between the long process of
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the incus and the capitulum of the stapes.
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Let me really mag that up.
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What I'm talking about is, here we have our head
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of the malleus, short process of the incus,
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the long process of the incus.
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And normally you have a good-looking
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incudostapedial joint,
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particularly when you're using thin-section
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images. These are 0.4 millimeter thick.
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Let's look at the contralateral side for those
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people who are wondering whether
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I'm just making it up.
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So, let me move over to the other side.
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And here we have our incus coming down.
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And look, the nice incudostapedial
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joint right there.
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Here's the capitulum near the crura of the
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stapes. And that's a nice-looking joint.
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Contrast that with this, where we have this gap.
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So this is an example of incudostapedial
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dislocation secondary to a fracture with a
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patient who presented after a delay with
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conductive hearing loss because, obviously,
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the incus was no longer attached to the stapes.
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The fracture site itself was obscured because it
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was a delayed presentation with just a little
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bit of a line here through the mastoid bone.
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And again, the longitudinal or otic capsule
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sparing fractures,
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or the ones that are more commonly associated
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with ossicular dislocations.
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