Abstract

Objective: Describe the clinical characteristics of patients with isolated cochlear endolymphatic hydrops (EH).Study design: Clinical case series.Setting: Tertiary Neurotology referral clinic.Patients: All subjects presenting to a University Neurotology clinic during a 1-year period from July 2015 until August 2016 who had isolated cochlear EH on MRI. Patients with a history of temporal bone surgery prior to the MRI were excluded.Intervention: High-resolution delayed-intravenous contrast MRI.Main outcome measures: Audiometric and vestibular testing, clinical history analysis.Results: 10 subjects demonstrated isolated, unilateral cochlear hydrops on MRI. None of these patients met the criteria for Meniere's disease. Mean age of the group was 66.4 years and most were males (70%). Unilateral aural fullness (70%), tinnitus (80%), and hearing loss (90%) were frequently observed. Only one patient presented with unsteadiness (10%) and one patient had a single isolated spell of positional vertigo 1 month prior to the MRI (10%) but no further vertigo spells in the 4 years following the MRI. The mean PTA was 37.8 dB which was significantly decreased from the non-affected ear with PTA of 17.9 (p < 0.001). One patient developed vertiginous spells and unsteadiness 4 years after initial presentation and a repeat MRI revealed progression to utricular, saccular and cochlear hydrops. Vestibular testing was obtained in five patients with one patient presenting with 50% caloric paresis and all others normal. The most common treatment tried was acetazolamide in seven patients with 86% reporting subjective clinical improvement. Two out of the 10 patients had a history of migraine (20%).Conclusions: Patients with MRI exhibiting isolated cochlear EH present with predominantly auditory symptoms: mild to moderate low-frequency hearing loss, aural fullness, tinnitus without significant vertigo. Isolated cochlear hydrops is more common in males, average age in mid-60's and there is a low comorbidity of migraine headaches. This contrasts significantly with patients with isolated saccular hydrops on MRI from our prior studies. We believe that isolated cochlear EH with hearing loss but no vertigo is distinct from Meniere's disease or its variant delayed endolymphatic hydrops. We propose that cochlear Meniere's disease represents a distinct clinical entity that could be a variant of Meniere's disease.

Highlights

  • Meniere’s disease is an inner ear disorder characterized with episodic spontaneous rotational vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss, tinnitus, and aural fullness

  • Despite the seemingly distinct clinical presentation of cochlear Meniere’s, this entity was excluded by the Committee on Hearing and Equilibrium of the Academy of Otolaryngology—Head & Neck Surgery (AAO-HNS) in 1985 [4, 5]

  • It is important to evaluate for the presence and localization of endolymphatic hydrops (EH) during life in order to correlate with the clinical presentation

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Summary

Introduction

Meniere’s disease is an inner ear disorder characterized with episodic spontaneous rotational vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss, tinnitus, and aural fullness. Cochlear hydrops or cochlear Meniere’s disease was once classified as a distinct diagnostic entity, considered to be a variant of Meniere’s disease without the vertigo. This group of patients previously diagnosed with cochlear Meniere’s presented with a history of fluctuating auditory symptoms of aural fullness, tinnitus, and hearing loss without vertigo or vestibular symptoms [3]. Despite the seemingly distinct clinical presentation of cochlear Meniere’s, this entity was excluded by the Committee on Hearing and Equilibrium of the AAO-HNS in 1985 [4, 5]. The question remains as to whether there is a specific histopathological correlate with isolated cochlear Meniere’s

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