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CT Findings in Temporal Bone Osteoradionecrosis

Authors :
Nakul Gupta
Paul W. Gidley
Salmaan Ahmed
Adam S. Garden
Lawrence E. Ginsberg
Jackson Hamilton
Source :
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography. 38:662-666
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2014.

Abstract

Purpose The goal of this study was to describe computed tomographic findings in patients with clinically proven temporal bone (TB) osteoradionecrosis (ORN) (TB-ORN). Materials and methods Computed tomographic scans of 20 patients were retrospectively evaluated for bony and soft tissue abnormalities. Clinical severity was graded based on level of therapy administered: mild (observation), moderate (antibiotics/hyperbaric oxygen), or severe (surgery). Results Radiation dose to the primary tumor ranged from 30 to 75.6 Gy. Time to onset of ORN from completion of radiation therapy was 2 to 22 years (median, 7 years). Clinical findings exposed bone, 20 of the 20 patients; otorrhea, 17 of the 20 patients; hearing loss, 11 of the 20 patients; otalgia, 10 of the 20 patients; facial nerve paralysis, 2 of the 20 patients; gait imbalance, 2 of the 20 patients. Computed tomographic findings: external auditory canal erosions, 18 of the 20 patients; mastoid effusion, 18 of the 20 patients; mastoid bony coalescence, 5 of the 20 patients; enhancing soft tissue, 6 of the 20 patients; soft tissue gas, 6 of the 20 patients; temporomandibular joint/condylar erosion, 3 of the 20 patients.Three patients developed an abscess. Conclusion Mastoid effusion and external auditory canal erosions are commonly seen with TB-ORN. Clinically moderate or severe cases of TB-ORN are more likely to demonstrate enhancing soft tissue (P = 0.002), soft tissue gas (P = 0.002), and temporomandibular joint involvement (P = 0.07).

Details

ISSN :
03638715
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e672d8fa263811614773d14b657c0d6f