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Review
. 1995 Jan;112(1):36-49.
doi: 10.1016/S0194-59989570302-0.

Imaging of the vestibule

Affiliations
Review

Imaging of the vestibule

J Vignaud et al. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1995 Jan.

Abstract

Purpose: State-of-the-art imaging of the normal and pathologic vestibule.

Methods and material: This study is based on the experience of three French imaging centers (Val de Grâce, Bégin, and Saint-Antoine hospitals) working with 1- and 1.5-tesla magnetic resonance units and high-resolution computed tomography, and it includes a review of the literature. Computed tomography is performed with a high-resolution program, matrix 512 x 512, field of view 9.6 cm, joined 1-mm section, overlapped sections every 0.5 mm, axial and coronal sections, or reformatted images. High-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (matrix 512 x 384), field of view 18 cm, is used with fast T2-weighted sequences (sections 3 or 2 mm thick, constructive interference in steady state, T2-weighted gradient echo sequence three-dimensional Fourier transformation). A joined section of 0.7 mm in any direction is obtained if necessary. Superimposition of computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging with a stereotactic technique by identification of identical anatomic points is sometimes used.

Results: We review the interest and place of computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging in the diseases of the labyrinth and internal auditory canal related to abnormal vestibular functions: inflammatory labyrinthitis, vestibular hemorrhages, sclerosing and ossifying labyrinthitis, traumatism, malformations, perilymphatic fistulas, otosclerosis, tumors, cochleovestibular neuritis, and hydrops of the endolymphatic system.

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