LATERAL SKULL BASE
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Transcript LATERAL SKULL BASE
LATERAL SKULL BASE
AMOLENDA, PATRICIA G.
Anatomy
Internal auditory canal with the facial nerve
Jugular Foramen
Foramen lacerum
Foramen ovale
Foramen spinosum
Clinical Examination
The symptoms of the diseases of the lateral skull
base may cause deficits of CN 7, 8, 9, 10, 11
CN testing
Oral cavity examination: CN 9 & 12
Indirect laryngoscopy: CN 10, recurrent laryngeal nerve
Clinical Examination
Cochleovestibular Syndrome
Sensorineural HL
Tinnitus
Dysequilibrium and vertigo
Clinical Examination
Jugular Foramen Syndrome
CN 9: palatal deviation
CN 10: unilateral vocal cord paralysis and dysphagia
CN 12: tongue deviation toward the affected side, lingual
atrophy, lingual fasciculations
Clinical Examination
Petrous Apex Syndrome
Triad
Purulent otorrhea
Stabbing ipsilateral facial pain (Trigeminal nerve irritation)
Diplopia (CN 6 palsy in petrous apex abscess)
Imaging Studies
• CT Scan
– Best for defining infiltration and destruction of bony structures
• MRI
– Better for defining and differentiating lesions especially tumor
and inflammatory processes
• Conventional Angiography
– Assess disease processes in close proximity to major vessels
– Embolization
Surgery of the Lateral Skull Base
• Intracranial-intradural
– Most common: suboccipital and retrosigmoid approach
• Intracranial-extradural (Transtemporal)
– Exposes the petrous pyramid through a temporal craniotomy
– The dura is separated from the surface of the petrous pyramid
and elevated away from it with the temporal lobe
– Used in surgical treatment of temporal bone fractures or
tumors of the internal auditory canal
Surgery of the Lateral Skull Base
Extracranial-extradural (Transmastoid and
infratemporal)
Laterobasal Fractures
Classification of Temporal Bone Fractures
Squama-mastoid Fractures
squLongitudinal temporal bone fracture
Transverse temporal bone fracture
Isolated meatal fracture
Squama-mastoid Fractures
Confined to the temporal squama and mastoid air
cells
Auditory and tympanic cavity may also be involved
Isolated Meatal Fracture
Most often caused by a posterior displacement of the
mandibular condyle
Usually due to a fall onto the chin
The fracture penetrates the posterior wall of the
glenoid fossa and the anterior wall of the ear canal
and is often associated with a condylar neck fracture
Longitudinal Temporal bone Fractures
Most common burst fracture
Caused by a diffuse, lateral traumatizing force (ex.
Falls, brain trauma)
Fracture along the EAC and the anterior border of
the petrous pyramid
Symptoms: otorrhea (blood or blood with CSF),
hearing loss, bloody rhinorrhea, facial paralysis
Longitudinal Temporal Bone Fracture
Diagnosis
Otoscopy: tearing of the meatal skin and TM, with
bleeding into the ear canal
Clinical auditory testing (Weber test):
lateralized to affected ear
Neurography: facial nerve function
Thin slice CT scan
Pure tone audiometry
Longitudinal Temporal Bone Fracture
Complications
Meningitis, OM w/ TM perforation, facial nerve
paralysis
Treatment
Cover the ear with sterile dressing
Corticosteroids: facial paralysis
Surgical exploration
Transverse Temporal Bone Fractures
Fracture that runs across the petrous pyramid along
the internal auditory canal and//or through the
labyrinth
Caused by a traumatizing force in the frontal plane
Symptoms: severe vertigo, nausea and vomiting,
deafness
Transverse Temporal Bone Fracture
Diagnosis
Clinical examination:
Weber Test-Lateralized to the normal ear
spontaneous nystagmus towards normal side
Otoscopy: hemotympanum
CT Scan
Transverse Temporal Bone Fracture
Complication
Meningitis, Facial nerve paralysis
Treatment
Surgical closure
Inflammations and Tumors of
the Lateral Skull Base
Otitis Media
most common inflammation and infection that affect
the lateral skull base region
Cholesteatoma is one of its complications which
arises from the middle ear and spreads to the lateral
skull base
Tumors of the Temporal Bone
Paraganglioma
Primary Cholesteatoma or Epidermoid
Carcinoma of the Mucosa
Sarcoma
Lymphoma
Paraganglioma
Also glomus tumor, chemodectoma
Most common tumor of the middle ear and adjacent
lateral skull base
Arises from the paraganglia of the temporal region, most
commonly in the area of the jugular bulb and along the
neural plexus of the tympanic cavity
It may be located in the middle ear, jugular bulb, carotid
bifurcation, and along the vagus nerve, and often extend
to the temporal bone region
Paraganglioma
Manifestations: pulsatile tinnitus and conductive
hearing loss, possible SNHL
Diagnosis: MRI, CT Scan, Angiography
Treatment: Surgery-subtotal petrosectomy
Tumors of the Internal Auditory Canal and
Cerebellopontine Angle
Vestibular Schwanomma
Meningioma
Hemangioma
Lipoma
Vestibular Schwanomma
Slow-growing, benign, tumor arising from the
Schwann cells of CN 8, affecting more commonly the
vestibular nerve
Medial tumors arise from the intracranial part of
CN8 while the lateral tumors are located in the
internal auditory canal
Clinical hallmark is a unilateral hearing disorder
which may consist of tinnitus, hearing loss and
dysacusis
Vestibular Schwannoma
Medial schwannomas can occasionally produce
trigeminal nerve symptoms such as facial pain or
numbness in the jaw
Large tumors present with signs of brainstem
compression and/or hydrocephalus with ataxia, nausea
& vomiting
Diagnosis:
clinical examination: shows unilateral cochleovestibular d/o
Audiometry: shows retrocochlear impairment with lengthening of
auditory brainstem reposnses
gadolinium enhanced MRI
Vestibular Schwanomma
<1cm: observe
1-2.5cm: streotactic radiosurgery/ open surgery
>2.5cm: open surgery