scholarly journals ROLE OF HIGH RESOLUTION COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY IN THE EVALUATION OF SUPPURATIVE DISEASES OF MIDDLE EAR AND MASTOIDS AND THEIR COMPLICATIONS WITH SURGICAL CORRELATION

2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (17) ◽  
pp. 850-858
Author(s):  
Deb Kr. Boruah ◽  
Barun Kumar Sharma ◽  
Shantiranjan Sanyal ◽  
Nirupam Malakar ◽  
Dhabal Dhingani D ◽  
...  
1982 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 711-720 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chat Virapongse ◽  
Stephen L. G. Rothman ◽  
Clarence Sasaki ◽  
E. Leon Kier

2013 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. CMENT.S10681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed A. Gomaa ◽  
Abdel Rahim A. Abdel Karim ◽  
Hosny S. Abdel Ghany ◽  
Ahmed A. Elhiny ◽  
Ahmed A. Sadek

Background Acquired cholesteatomas are commonly seen in patients less than 30 years. There is a typical history of recurrent middle ear infections with tympanic membrane perforation. The diagnosis of cholesteatoma is usually made on otologic examination. Objective The aim of the work was to study the role of high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) in detecting, evaluating, and diagnosing middle ear cholesteatoma. Patients and methods This was a prospective study that included 56 consecutive patients with chronic suppurative otitis media, unsafe type cholesteatomas. Each patient was subjected to full clinical evaluation, and HRCT examination. Intravenous contrast media was used in some patients with suspected intracranial complication. Preoperative radiological data were correlated with data related to surgical findings. Results The study showed that a high incidence of cholesteatoma in the third decade of life. The scutum and lateral attic wall were the most common bony erosions in the middle ear bony wall (64.3%), and the incus was the most eroded ossicle in the middle ear (88.2%). Sclerosing of mastoid air cells were encountered in 60.7% of patients and the lateral semicircular canal was affected in 9%, while facial canal erosion was found in 21.4%. Temporal bone complications are more common than intracranial complications. HRCT findings were compared with operative features; the comparative study included the accuracy and sensitivity of HRCT in detecting cholesteatoma (92.8%), its location and extension (96.4%), ossicular chain erosion (98%), labyrinthine fistula and intracranial complications (100%). Conclusion The important role of HRCT scannig lies on the early detection of cholesteatoma, and more conservative surgical procedures can be used to eradicate the disease.


Author(s):  
Christophe T. Arendt ◽  
Doris Leithner ◽  
Marius E. Mayerhoefer ◽  
Peter Gibbs ◽  
Christian Czerny ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives To evaluate the performance of radiomic features extracted from high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) for the differentiation between cholesteatoma and middle ear inflammation (MEI), and to investigate the impact of post-reconstruction harmonization and data resampling. Methods One hundred patients were included in this retrospective dual-center study: 48 with histology-proven cholesteatoma (center A: 23; center B: 25) and 52 with MEI (A: 27; B: 25). Radiomic features (co-occurrence and run-length matrix, absolute gradient, autoregressive model, Haar wavelet transform) were extracted from manually defined 2D-ROIs. The ten best features for lesion differentiation were selected using probability of error and average correlation coefficients. A multi-layer perceptron feed-forward artificial neural network (MLP-ANN) was used for radiomics-based classification, with histopathology serving as the reference standard (70% of cases for training, 30% for validation). The analysis was performed five times each on (a) unmodified data and on data that were (b) resampled to the same matrix size, and (c) corrected for acquisition protocol differences using ComBat harmonization. Results Using unmodified data, the MLP-ANN classification yielded an overall median area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.78 (0.72–0.84). Using original data from center A and resampled data from center B, an overall median AUC of 0.88 (0.82–0.99) was yielded, while using ComBat harmonized data, an overall median AUC of 0.89 (0.79–0.92) was revealed. Conclusion Radiomic features extracted from HRCT differentiate between cholesteatoma and MEI. When using multi-centric data obtained with differences in CT acquisition parameters, data resampling and ComBat post-reconstruction harmonization clearly improve radiomics-based lesion classification. Key Points • Unenhanced high-resolution CT coupled with radiomics analysis may be useful for the differentiation between cholesteatoma and middle ear inflammation. • Pooling of data extracted from inhomogeneous CT datasets does not appear meaningful without further post-processing. • When using multi-centric CT data obtained with differences in acquisition parameters, post-reconstruction harmonization and data resampling clearly improve radiomics-based soft-tissue differentiation.


1998 ◽  
Vol 255 (6) ◽  
pp. 277-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. S. Karhuketo ◽  
P. S. Dastidar ◽  
E. M. Laasonen ◽  
M. M. Sipilä ◽  
H. J. Puhakka

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