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Stereotactic radiation treatment of vestibular schwannoma: indications, limitations, and outcomes.
There are several cases where people with schwannomatosis have developed a vestibular schwannoma (acoustic neuroma).
Bruns nystagmus: Bilateral nystagmus found in patients with vestibular schwannoma.
Skull base tumors, such as vestibular schwannoma (acoustic neuroma)
Gamma knife radiosurgery for vestibular schwannoma.
Bruns nystagmus is also associated with an increased incidence of balance disturbance in patients with vestibular schwannoma.
Also known as a vestibular schwannoma, Acoustic Neuroma can be managed conservatively or surgically.
Vestibular schwannoma (Acoustic neuroma)
Acoustic neuroma (vestibular schwannoma) - this is a schwannoma (benign neoplasm of Schwann cells)
Auditory canal decompression is another surgical technique that can prolong usable hearing when a vestibular schwannoma has grown too large to remove without damage to the cochlear nerve.
It occurs in 11% of patients with vestibular schwannoma, and occurs mainly in patients with larger tumours (67% of patients with tumours over 3.5cm diameter).
However, a detailed otolaryngological examination, audiometry, and head MRI scan should be performed to exclude a vestibular schwannoma or superior canal dehiscence which would cause similar symptoms.
The so-called acoustic neuroma of NF II is in fact a Schwannoma of the nervus vestibularis, or vestibular Schwannoma.
Lapatinib is being studied by Jeffrey Allen at NYU Langone Medical Center for treatment of vestibular schwannoma in Neurofibromatosis type II.
A vestibular schwannoma, often called an acoustic neuroma, is a benign primary intracranial tumor of the myelin-forming cells of the vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII).
The term "vestibular schwannoma" involves the vestibular portion of the 8th cranial nerve and arises from Schwann cells, which are responsible for the myelin sheath in the peripheral nervous system.
The early symptoms of an acoustic neuroma are often subtle.
Other serious medical problems, such as Ménière's disease or an acoustic neuroma.
There are several different surgical techniques for the removal of acoustic neuroma.
There are three main courses of treatment for acoustic neuroma:
One known risk factor for acoustic neuroma is exposure to high doses of radiation.
Three years later, doctors diagnosed an acoustic neuroma, a tumor of his inner ear.
Five years after her mother's recovery, her father was diagnosed with acoustic neuroma.
The misnomer of acoustic neuroma is still often used.
The reason an acoustic neuroma forms is unknown.
Indicated treatments for acoustic neuroma include surgical removal and radiotherapy.
Since the growth rate of an acoustic neuroma rarely accelerates, annual observation is sufficient.
Microsurgery for acoustic neuroma is the only technique that removes the tumor.
Removing an acoustic neuroma is more commonly done for:
In general, the longer people were exposed to loud noises the more likely they were to develop acoustic neuroma.
He was diagnosed with acoustic neuroma, and underwent an operation to remove a benign tumor.
An acoustic neuroma is a slow-growing tumor of the nerve that connects the ear to the brain.
Removing an acoustic neuroma can damage nerves, causing loss of hearing or weakness in the face muscles.
An acoustic neuroma is not cancer.
Often his patients are seeking reconstructive work after removal of acoustic neuroma, a type of brain tumor.
An acoustic neuroma is not cancerous (malignant); it does not spread to other parts of the body.
Support and information for patients who have been diagnosed with acoustic neuroma, a benign tumor affecting the 8th cranial nerve.
The health care provider may diagnose an acoustic neuroma based on your medical history, an examination of your nervous system, or tests.
The most useful test to identify an acoustic neuroma is an MRI of the head.
An acoustic neuroma is a noncancerous growth that develops on the eighth cranial nerve.
There are several cases where people with schwannomatosis have developed a vestibular schwannoma (acoustic neuroma).