Abstract

ObjectiveTo elucidate the pathophysiological process by analyzing the correlation between morphological and functional changes in patients with delayed endolymphatic hydrops (DEH). MethodsTwenty-nine patients diagnosed with DEH were enrolled in this retrospective study. All patients were assessed using the caloric test, cervical and ocular vestibular evoked myogenic potentials, and gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the inner ear. ResultsAccording to the MRI, the hydrops localization was categorized as hydrops in the vestibule (saccule and utricle) (14%), hydrops in the vestibule and cochlea (72%), and hydrops in the vestibule, cochlea, and lateral semicircular canal (LSCC) (14%). Vestibular hydrops could definitely be observed as function declined; however, a dysfunction of both the saccule and utricle was not always present when vestibular hydrops was detected with MRI. In the LSCC, a decline in functional tests was not necessarily accompanied by morphological abnormalities. However, dysfunction could definitely be detected when LSCC hydrops was observed with MRI. ConclusionsHydrops can be found mainly in the vestibule as shown by MRI. In the vestibule, abnormalities are commonly morphologic rather than functional, whereas in the LSCC a functional deterioration can be detected more frequently than morphological changes. SignificanceOur findings can provide a new perspective on the functional and morphological characteristics of patients with DEH.

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