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Radiological patterns of the posterior semicircular canal

Authors :
Borja Gracia-Tello
Miguel Ángel Crovetto
Claudio Martínez
A. Whyte
Rafael Crovetto
Cisneros A
Jesús Obón
J. Whyte
Source :
Surgical and radiologic anatomy : SRA. 36(2)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The identification and definition of the radiological patterns of the posterior semicircular canal (PSC), with a view to obtain readily applicable conclusions. The parietal morphology of the PSC has been studied by multi-slice helical computed tomography (Philips Brilliance 6). We have determined the distribution of the different types of bone cover of the PSC, taking some previously notified, standardised measurements of normality as reference. 318 patients have been analysed (604 petrous bone) by CT and we have distinguished five different radiological patterns: type or normal, thick, thin, pneumatised and dehiscent. The first three patterns, normal, thick and thin, have in common the existence of a compact bone interposed between PSC and posterior fossa, being in the normal pattern has a thickness of between 0.9 and 2.5 mm (327 cases, 54.13 %), in the thick pattern is ≥2.6 mm (99 cases, 16.39 %) and in the thin pattern is ≤1.2 mm (158 cases, 26.15 %). The fourth pattern, pneumatised, is characterised by having retro labyrinthine cells between PSC and media fossa (19 cases, 3.14 %). Finally, a dehiscent pattern was observed in 2 cases (0.3 %). We describe five different radiological patterns: type or normal, thick, thin, pneumatised and dehiscent. The thin type (

Details

ISSN :
12798517
Volume :
36
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgical and radiologic anatomy : SRA
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8735db49dbf98aa77b3db5a0363cb118