Radiology Case Reports (Mar 2024)

A case of cochlear-facial dehiscence revealed after bilateral cochlear implants

  • Chiara Perazzini,
  • Luce Compagnone,
  • Pascal Chabrot,
  • Luis Boyer,
  • Mathilde Puechmaille,
  • Thierry Mom

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 3
pp. 1110 – 1117

Abstract

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The cochlear implant is an implanted auditory prosthesis that can restore severe and profound hearing loss. About 20% of patients with congenital sensorineural hearing loss have a malformation of the inner ear. These abnormalities must be investigated before a cochlear implant because they can lead to intra and postoperative complications and/or anomalies. Most labyrinthine malformations are well known; some are less frequent and can be underdiagnosed at the preoperative computed tomography. This report presents the case of bilateral cochlear-facial dehiscence, bony dehiscence between the facial nerve labyrinthine segment, and cochlear basal turn. In our 56-year-old patient, this malformation was misdiagnosed before the cochlear implant and revealed afterward because of abnormal facial nerve stimulation during intraoperative electrophysiological checking.

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