Interactive Transcript
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This is a patient who had both conductive hearing
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loss as well as vertigo. On the axial scans,
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we know now, in these young adults, to look for a specific
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area for fenestral otospongiosis.
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What we do is we look for the stapes,
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which is seen here.
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We have the vestibule,
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and we are at the level of the oval window.
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And if we look at the anterior footplate of the stapes,
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we're going to look for any evidence of
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demineralized bone. And with that introduction,
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hopefully, you identify that this
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is the area of otospongiosis.
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So, again, this area of bone is lower in density than the
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remainder of the bone around the cochlea
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and vestibule. And if I scroll,
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around this,
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you can see that this plaque of demineralization
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is present on about three or four slices.
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But by the end of this course,
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you'll be making this diagnosis pretty easily.
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Now, how do we explain the vertigo?
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Well, the vertigo may be a toxic effect in the
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semicircular canals by the spongiotic bone
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enzymatic entry into the vestibule, and from there,
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going into the semicircular canals.
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But in this patient,
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what we found was that there was, in addition to
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otospongiosis, the dehiscence of the superior
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semicircular canal, no bone over top of the
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superior semicircular canal on the left side.
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On the spiral reconstruction,
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if we follow the superior semicircular canal as
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the sections are cut across the top of the
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superior semicircular canal, you see some
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areas where you have lost the bone,
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overlying that semicircular canal
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in an area of dehiscence.
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So this patient had not just fenestral
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otospongiosis and conductive
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hearing loss on that basis,
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but had Tullio's phenomenon and vertigo associated
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with loud noises, secondary to superimposed
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dehiscence of the superior semicircular canal.
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