Interactive Transcript
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So one of the most common studies that you will
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encounter in the head neck is the
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evaluation of CP angle masses.
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And the reason we do CP angle masses is to evaluate
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patients that have these various symptoms,
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which include things such as hearing loss,
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dizziness, vertigo, and tinnitus.
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And part of the goal of this specific area on
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Cerebella Pontine angle masses is to help
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differentiate between entity number one and
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entity number two and entity number three.
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Now, on the surface, they look somewhat similar,
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but in reality, this is a schwanoma,
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this is a meningioma, and this is an epidermid.
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And we'll be talking a lot more about these
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different disease entities. But eventually,
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all these disease entities can present with these
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type of symptoms, which include hearing loss,
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dizziness, vertigo, and tinnitus. But for me,
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it's always been important when you start to
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evaluate patients that have hearing loss,
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is to understand where this
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fits into the big picture.
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Because when we look at patients that
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have hearing loss or dizziness,
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we have to understand how we hear.
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So eventually we hear through sound waves
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being converted into mechanical energy,
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being converted into fluid energy,
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and eventually the fluid energy is then converted
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into electrical energy that gets
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transmitted to the brain.
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So when we're talking about patients with
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Cerebella pontine angle masses,
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we're really looking at the downstream anatomy,
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because it is these nerves that eventually extend
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from the cochlea through the cerebellopontine
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angle and then into the brain.
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When we look at the detailed anatomy of the cochlea,
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the part of the inner ear that converts the fluid
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energy into the electrical energy is this organ
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right here, which is the organ of corti.
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So the organ of corti really what it is.
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It's a hydroelectric plant that converts fluid
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energy into electrical energy, and eventually,
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it's that electrical energy that
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gets transmitted to the brain.
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So when we look at that detailed anatomy
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involving the internal auditory canal,
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we are now specifically going to look
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at the internal auditory canal.
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We're going to look at these four nerves
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that eventually extend into the brain.
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And the way that we see these nerves,
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we will comment on the next section,
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which will be specifically dedicated
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to the imaging technique.
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