Unusual presentations of acoustic tumours |
Author(s):
Journal/Book: Clin Otolaryngol. 1996; 21: Osney Mead, Oxford, Oxon, England OX2 0EL. Blackwell Science Ltd. 80-83.
Abstract: A series of 238 consecutive patients with acoustic neuromas, operated on in Paris has been studied to identify unusual presentations and varied symptomatology. The most common history was that of a progressive unilateral hearing loss (in 68.1%), with tinnitus (in 49.1%) or disequilibrium (in 49.1%) or both. Sudden hearing loss (in 14.7%) or fluctuating hearing loss (in 6.3%), and a single or repeated episodes of acute vertigo (in 8.8%) were seen less commonly. Headaches occurred as an associated symptom in 10.5%, tinnitus was the sole symptom in 2.8% and other uncommon symptoms included otalgia, facial nerve palsy, facial or ocular pain, altered sensation in the face or eye, or tingling of the tongue. Some 11.3% of patients presented with normal pure tone auditory thresholds and a 100% speech discrimination score and of these patients acoustic reflex thresholds were normal in 53% and brainstem auditory evoked responses were suggestive of the retro-cochlear abnormality in only 76.2%. Amongst the less common presentations, the initial symptoms mimicked such diagnoses as Meniere's disease, benign positional vertigo, vertebro-basilar migraine, vertebro-basilar insufficiency, Bell's palsy and Trigeminal neuralgia. Overall, 20.6% of patients had unusual initial presenting symptoms, 36.5% of the symptoms were unusual and these were found in isolation in 11.8% of patients. An awareness of the spectrum of more subtle symptoms of acoustic tumours may lead to the correct diagnosis at an earlier stage.
Note: Article GAJ Morrison, St Thomas Hosp, Dept Otolaryngol, London SE1 7EH, England
Keyword(s): acoustic neuroma; presentation; hearing
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