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Malignant External Otitis in a Diabetic

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This patient also had painful right ear.

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Looking at the CT scan bone windows

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on the axial plane,

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we see the relatively dramatic thickening

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of the wall of the external ear canal,

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both anteriorly and posteriorly.

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On the external bony portion.

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We have the tympanic membrane here, which is okay,

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and nothing in the middle ear cavity

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and the middle ear ossicles.

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What was identified, however,

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was some irregularity along the anterior wall with

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little divots and dots of bone erosion that was

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evident on this external canal anterior wall,

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which should have a nice smooth margination.

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Once you start seeing bony erosion of the external

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canal with associated external otitis,

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you want to start worrying about potential spread

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to the bony region of the skull base.

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So this indeed was a patient who had diabetes and

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had a Pseudomonas external auditory canal infection.

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You may be presented only with a temporal bone

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CT for the evaluation of these patients,

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which does not allow you to see the full skull base,

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and that's what occurred in this particular example.

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Here we have the soft tissue window from the CT scan

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for external otitis externa. And as you can see,

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the field of view was cut off to not demonstrate

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the skull base. However,

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you note that the patient did receive contrast.

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So this is our transverse sinus and sigmoid

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sinus coming to the jugular foramen and

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the jugular vein. So on this example,

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the only thing that really helped us was windowing

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for soft tissue and demonstrating that within the

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parapharyngeal space fat there was edema that

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was not present on the left side.

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We also noted that the shape of the jugular vein at

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the skull base was slightly irregular and

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there was soft tissue posterior to it.

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So this is spread of otitis externa

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around the carotid sheath structures.

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So here's our internal carotid artery in jugular

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vein and from there to the parapharyngeal space,

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all indicative of otitis externa

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of the skull base. In this case,

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we did not see anything on the CT scan at the skull

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base to identify osteomyelitis. However,

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this is an indication for skull-based MRI scanning,

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because as I showed in the PowerPoint,

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the MRI scan may be much more sensitive to the

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edema in the bone marrow than a CT scan in.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Temporal bone

Neuroradiology

Infectious

Head and Neck

CT

Brain

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