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Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma with MEC Extension

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This is another patient who had a malignancy that

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led to spread to the middle ear cavity.

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When we look at the temporal bone

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CT scan on the left side,

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we can see that there is partial opacification of

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the middle ear cavity, as well as

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the mastoid air cells. In fact,

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it looks like it's completely opacified.

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The middle ear ossicles are completely encased by

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soft tissue. It doesn't look that destructive.

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It actually looks more, you know, there's no loss of

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the septations of the mastoid air cells,

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the middle ear cavity.

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Although, it's filled with clearly

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a soft tissue mass,

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it doesn't look all that destructive as far

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as the bony reaction around it.

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However,

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the biopsy of this proved to represent a non-

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keratinizing undifferentiated carcinoma.

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So, this is an adult.

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And what we should have done is to pay a little

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bit more clear attention to the nasopharynx.

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You can see here, on the left side,

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you have a large mass which is infiltrating the

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tensor and levator veli palatini muscles.

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It's causing blockage of the fossa of rosenmüller.

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It extends to the pterygoid plate.

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There is some parapharyngeal soft tissue

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associated with it here.

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And this indeed turned out to

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be nasopharyngeal carcinoma,

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which had grown posterolaterally along the

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eustachian tube and presented as a middle ear

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malignancy from nasopharyngeal carcinoma.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Temporal bone

Neuroradiology

Neoplastic

Head and Neck

CT

Brain

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