Acoustic neuroma CT
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Acoustic neuroma Microchapters | |
Diagnosis | |
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Treatment | |
Case Studies | |
Acoustic neuroma CT On the Web | |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Acoustic neuroma CT | |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [3]Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Simrat Sarai, M.D. [4]
Overview
CT scan of the head may be diagnostic of acoustic neuroma. Findings on CT scan diagnostic of acoustic neuroma include erosion and widening of the internal acoustic canal.
CT
- CT scan with bone windows can be of prognostic significance as the extent of widening of the internal auditory meatus and the extent of tumor growth anterior and caudal to the internal auditory meatus are predictive of postoperative hearing loss.
- On CT scan, vestibular schwannoma can be seen as an enhancing lesion in the region of the internal auditory canal with variable extension into the cerebellopontine angle.[1]
- CT may show erosion and widening of the internal acoustic canal.
- Contrast enhancement is present, but can be underwhelming, especially in larger lesions with cystic components.
- Well-performed scanning can demonstrate tumors 1 - 2 mm in diameter. However, even with intravenous contrast enhancement, thin-cut CT scanning can miss tumors as large as 1.5 cm.
- Fine-cut CT scanning of the internal auditory canal with contrast can detect medium-size or large tumors but are not reliable imaging techniques to detect a tumors smaller than 1 - 1.5 cm.
References
- ↑ C. Matthies, M. Samii & S. Krebs (1997). "Management of vestibular schwannomas (acoustic neuromas): radiological features in 202 cases--their value for diagnosis and their predictive importance". Neurosurgery. 40 (3): 469–481. PMID 9055285. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Image courtesy of Dr Frank Gaillard. Radiopaedia (original file [1]).[http://radiopaedia.org/licence Creative Commons BY-SA-NC
- ↑ Image courtesy of Dr Prashant Mudgal. Radiopaedia (original file [2]).[http://radiopaedia.org/licence Creative Commons BY-SA-NC