The cochlear aqueduct in pediatric temporal bones

Autor: Bachor, E., Byahatti, S., Karmody, C.
Zdroj: European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology: Official Journal of the European Federation of Oto-Rhino-Laryngological Societies (EUFOS); January 1997, Vol. 254 Issue: Supplement 1 pS34-S38, 5p
Abstrakt: Abstract: The cochlear aqueduct is a bony channel which contains the fibrous periotic duct and connects the perilymphatic space of the basal turn of the cochlea with the subarachnoid space of the posterior cranial cavity. Previous histological studies suggested that patency depended on age, whereas a more recent study showed no statistical correlation between age and patency. To clarify patency in pediatric cochlear aqueducts, we selected 21 temporal bones from 12 infants and children, varying in age from birth to 9 years, in which the cochlear aqueduct was fully visible on one histological section. Photographs were taken for documentation and the length and width of the orifice of the external aperture of the aqueduct at the scala tympani were measured and followed to the internal aperture at the subarachnoid space. The lumen of the duct was examined for mononucleated cells, blood cells and fibrous tissue. Measurements revealed that the mean length of the cochlear aqueduct was 4.6 mm (range, 2.4–10.7 mm), mean width of the external aperture was 484 μm (range, 225–869 μm), and mean width of the internal aperture was 1293 μm (range, 699–2344 μm). The mean diameter of the narrowest part (isthmus) was 151 μm (range, 75–244 μm). In all temporal bones the cochlear aqueduct was patent, with one exception. This latter temporal bone was from a 2-month-old girl with multiple intralabyrinthine anomalies, with the missing cochlear aqueduct believed to be due to an aplasia. Our results support prior measurements of the cochlear aqueduct and demonstrate a short and patent cochlear aqueduct in newborns. With growth, a significant increasing length of the duct was found.
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