Abstract

A 49-year-old male who attended our hospital due to a history of left hearing loss over a period of 2 years, associated to otalgia, and vertigo to which bleeding in the left ear and facial paralysis had been added in the last 4 months. He reported the simultaneous onset of a left-sided neck swelling with slow growing. After this, he developed loss of sensation of taste on the posterior third of the tongue and swallowing dysfunction, dysphonia, atrophy of the trapezius and sternocleidomastoid muscle and deviation and atrophy of tongue toward the affected side. On physical examination, the mass was found to be painless, soft, pulsating and semifixed. During the otoscopic examination, a pulsatile erythematous lesion of vascular appearance was noted in the external auditory canal. The audiometric test revealed severe left mixed hearing loss. A Doppler ultrasound was performed, which revealed a hypervascularized tumor in the left-sided neck that extended to the skull base. An axial and coronal computerized tomography (CT) scan was taken, revealing a soft tissue lesion extending from the border of II and III neck region to the middle ear and external auditory canal, causing large jugular bulb, hypoglossal canal and temporal bone erosion. This mass avidly enhanced after CT angiography. Following the results of preoperative examinations, diagnosis of simultaneous left glomus vagale, jugulare and tympanicum was confirmed. As the tumor was unresectable, the patient received fractionated radiotherapy associated with iterative stereotactic radio surgery. The patient has been stable over the last two years.

Highlights

  • A 49-year-old male who attended our hospital due to a history of left hearing loss over a period of 2 years, associated to otalgia, and vertigo to which bleeding in the left ear and facial paralysis had been added in the last 4 months

  • A pulsatile erythematous lesion of vascular appearance was noted in the external auditory canal

  • An axial and coronal computerized tomography (CT) scan was taken, revealing a soft tissue lesion extending from the border of II and III neck region to the middle ear and external auditory canal, causing large jugular bulb, hypoglossal canal and temporal bone erosion

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Summary

Introduction

A 49-year-old male who attended our hospital due to a history of left hearing loss over a period of 2 years, associated to otalgia, and vertigo to which bleeding in the left ear and facial paralysis had been added in the last 4 months. An unusual case of simultaneous left glomus vagale, jugulare and tympanicum tumor Salah Bellasri1, &, Mounir Hmidi2 1Medical Imaging Department, Military Hospital, University Mohammed V, Rabat, Morocco, 2Department of Otorhinolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Military Hospital Meknes, Morocco &Corresponding author: Salah Bellasri, Medical Imaging Department, Military Hospital, University Mohammed V, Rabat, Morocco Key words: Glomus jugulare, glomus tympanicum, glomus vagale, chemodectoma, paraganglioma Received: 25/01/2017 - Accepted: 19/02/2017 - Published: 27/04/2017

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