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Revista argentina de radiología
On-line version ISSN 1852-9992
Abstract
ESTEVES DA CUNHA, Marina A. et al. High definition magnetic resonance imaging for the evaluation of labyrinthic disorders. Rev. argent. radiol. [online]. 2022, vol.86, n.2, pp.93-101. Epub July 14, 2022. ISSN 1852-9992. http://dx.doi.org/10.24875/rar.m22000025.
Objective:
The objective of this investigation is to describe the findings in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in intralabyrinthine lesions.
Method:
We included patients evaluated between January 2012 and March 2019 who underwent an MRI of the inner ear. Demographic and image data were collected. MRI included high-resolution T2 (HR-T2), non-contrast T1 (NC-T1) and contrast-enhanced T1 (CE-T1).
Results:
MRI images of 23 patients were analyzed. The median age was 60 years (range: 43-73). We found 8 (34.8%) patients with intra-labyrinthine neurinoma, 7 (30.4%) patients with inflammatory labyrinthitis, 5 (21.7%) with ossifying labyrinthitis and 3 (13%) with intra-labyrinthine hemorrhage. All patients with intra-labyrinthine neurinoma had a low signal in HR-T2, a slight high signal in NC- T1 and post-contrast enhancement. Three patients with inflammatory labyrinthitis (42.5%) had low signal in HR-T2 and 5 patients (71%) had enhancement with CE-T1. Patients with ossifying labyrinthitis had a low signal in HR-T2 and patients with hemorrhage had high signal in NC-T1. Patients with intra-labyrinthine neurinoma had a lower signal in HR-T2 than patients with inflammatory labyrinthitis (p = 0.026).
Conclusions:
There are multiple entities that can alter the labyrinth signal in MRI. The radiological pattern allows establishing their diagnosis. The research provides relevant information for the interpretation of the alterations of the membranous labyrinth signal in MRI.
Keywords : Magnetic resonance imaging; Labyrinth; Labyrinthitis.