0000000000266759
AUTHOR
Enrico Piccirillo
Chronic otitis caused by heterotopic brain tissue in pterygopalatine fossa
Summary Heterotopic brain tissue is a rare is congenital anomaly, it may present at any age but it is frequently in infancy. This anomaly can occur most frequently in nasal region, although rests elsewhere in the digestive tract, in facial tissue or in lungs have been reported. Heterotopic brain tissue has been defined as a mass composed of mature brain tissue, outside the cranial cavity or spinal canal. We present a 9 years old girl with history of left chronic otitis and nasal obstruction caused by heterotopic brain tissue in pterygopalatine fossa.
Cystic vestibular schwannoma: classification, management, and facial nerve outcomes.
OBJECTIVE: Review of postoperative morbidity and facial nerve outcomes of cystic vestibular schwannoma (CVS) patients compared with solid vestibular schwannoma (SVS) patients and a proposal for a new CVS classification system. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review. SETTING: Tertiary care facility. PATIENTS: Ninety-six patients with surgically treated CVS (1998-2008). Outcomes were assessed in a subpopulation of 57 patients with greater than or equal to 1-year follow-up compared with 57 SVS patients. INTERVENTION: Fifty-six CVS patients underwent the enlarged translabyrinthine approach with transapical extension (Type I), and 1 patient underwent a transcochlear/transzygomatic approach. MAIN OUT…