Abstract

In an attempt to better understand the mechanism of eighth nerve dysfunction in acoustic neuromas (vestibular schwannomas), we have morphologically examined microvessels and nerve fibers in the intracanalicular portion of eighth nerve specimens attached to these tumors. At the light microscopic level, microvessels were well preserved in all the specimens, even in the extremely flattened or markedly small nerve fascicles. However, the density of microvessels was quite variable in the different specimens, presumably as the result of different levels of compression by the tumors and the subsequent formation of a collateral microcirculation in each nerve. Focal areas of mild endoneurial fibrosis were found in 9 out of 22 specimens examined, but severe and widespread degeneration or demyelination was not found in any of the specimens. Ultrastructural studies frequently revealed mild to moderate abnormalities in myelin sheaths, and occasionally showed endothelial hyperplasia and hypertrophy in all the specimens. These findings are consistent with the slight to moderate reduction of endoneurial blood flow in the eighth nerves. The resultant ischemic condition in the eighth nerve may account for the eighth nerve conduction block in acoustic neuromas.

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