Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5629638 Journal of Clinical Neuroscience 2017 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Autophony was the most common symptom at presentation, followed by tinnitus.•Aural fullness and autophony were the most common symptoms to resolve after repair.•A small number of patients developed disequilibrium, vertigo or aural fullness after repair.•Number of patients with symptoms, except headache, were statistically different after repair.

Superior semicircular canal dehiscence (SSCD) is a rare defect of the arcuate eminence that causes an abnormal connection between the superior semicircular canal and middle cranial fossa. Patients often present with a variety of auditory and vestibular symptoms. Trigger avoidance is the initial strategy, but surgery may be necessary in debilitating cases. We retrospectively reviewed SSCD patients undergoing repair via a middle fossa craniotomy between March 2011 and September 2015. Forty-nine patients undergoing 58 surgeries were identified. Autophony was the most common symptom at presentation (n = 44; 90%). Mean follow-up was 10.9 months, with 100% of patients reporting resolution of at least one symptom. Aural fullness was the most commonly resolved symptom following surgical repair (n = 19/22; 86%). Hearing loss (n = 11/25; 44%) and tinnitus (n = 11/38; 29%) were the most common symptoms to persist following surgery. The most common symptom to develop after surgery was disequilibrium (n = 4/18; 22%). Upon comparing the overall pre-operative and post-operative groups, the number of patients with autophony (p < 0.0001), aural fullness (p = 0.0006), hearing loss (p = 0.0119), disequilibrium (p = 0.0002), sound- and pressure-induced vertigo (p < 0.0001), and tinnitus (p < 0.0001) were significantly different. Improved clinical outcomes were demonstrated in patients undergoing SSCD repair through a middle cranial fossa approach. The most common presenting symptom (autophony) was also most likely to resolve after surgery. Hearing loss is less amenable to surgical correction. Disequilibrium developed in a small number of patients after repair.

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