| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4103558 | American Journal of Otolaryngology | 2015 | 5 Pages |
ObjectiveTo demonstrate the different neuro-otologic clinical presentations of tuberculosis.Study designRetrospective clinical analysis.Result83.3% of the cases of ear or central nervous system TB were without concomitant lung disease. 2 cases had primary infection in the central nervous system. The neuro-otologic manifestation was as follows: 85.7% sensorineural hearing loss; 42% polyneuropathy. 71.4% had granulation tissue. 2 had normal otoscopy. In 6 patients the histopathology and Ziehl Neelsen were confirmatory. One case was confirmed by the positive response to treatment with antituberculosis drugs.ConclusionsTuberculosis has a wide variety of neurotologic manifestations from chronic otitis media cadres to vestibular, audiological and neurological manifestations as well as a large variability in imaging studies.
