Abstract

MR imaging is often used for detecting intracranial complications of acute mastoiditis, whereas the intratemporal appearance of mastoiditis has been overlooked. The aim of this study was to assess the imaging features caused by acute mastoiditis in MR imaging and their clinical relevance. Medical records and MR imaging findings of 31 patients with acute mastoiditis (21 adults, 10 children) were analyzed retrospectively. The degree of opacification in the temporal bone, signal and enhancement characteristics, bone destruction, and the presence of complications were correlated with clinical history and outcome data, with pediatric and adult patients compared. Most patients had ≥50% of the tympanic cavity and 100% of the mastoid antrum and air cells opacified. Compared with CSF, they also showed intramastoid signal changes in T1 spin-echo, T2 TSE, CISS, and DWI sequences; and intramastoid, outer periosteal, and perimastoid dural enhancement. The most common complications in MR imaging were intratemporal abscess (23%), subperiosteal abscess (19%), and labyrinth involvement (16%). Children had a significantly higher prevalence of total opacification of the tympanic cavity (80% versus 19%) and mastoid air cells (90% versus 21%), intense intramastoid enhancement (90% versus 33%), outer cortical bone destruction (70% versus 10%), subperiosteal abscess (50% versus 5%), and perimastoid meningeal enhancement (80% versus 33%). Acute mastoiditis causes several intra- and extratemporal changes on MR imaging. Total opacification of the tympanic cavity and the mastoid, intense intramastoid enhancement, perimastoid dural enhancement, bone erosion, and extracranial complications are more frequent in children.

Highlights

  • BACKGROUND AND PURPOSEMR imaging is often used for detecting intracranial complications of acute mastoiditis, whereas the intratemporal appearance of mastoiditis has been overlooked

  • Total opacification of the tympanic cavity and the mastoid, intense intramastoid enhancement, perimastoid dural enhancement, bone erosion, and extracranial complications are more frequent in children

  • Acute mastoiditis (AM) is a complication of otitis media in which infection in the middle ear cleft involves the mucoperiosteum and bony septa of the mastoid air cells. It can be divided into coalescent and noncoalescent mastoiditis

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to assess the imaging features caused by acute mastoiditis in MR imaging and their clinical relevance. Our aim was to describe MR imaging findings resulting from AM and to clarify their clinical relevance

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