Nasopharyngeal carcinoma is a disease with a remarkable racial and geographical distribution. In most parts of the world it is a rare condition and in only a handful of places does this low risk profile alter. These include the Southern Chinese, Eskimos and other Arctic natives, inhabitants of South-East Asia and also the populations of North Africa and Kuwait.
Atrophic rhinitis is a chronic, debilitating and recalcitrant disease of the nasal cavities that is prevalent in several parts of the world. It has unique epidemiological features and clinical characteristics. Clinicians and researchers for decades have tried to postulate theories for the aetiology of the primary form of the disease. Management of the disease has seen several medical therapeutic regimens including alternative forms of medicine. Surgical options for the condition are also not completely satisfactory with a number of failures and recurrences. The authors provide here a comprehensive review of the existing literature as regards the aetiology and management of this refractory condition.
The authors recommend the use of fluid-attenuated inversion recovery and diffusion sequence MRI when definitive radiologic diagnosis of cystic intracranial lesions becomes difficult with routine computerized tomographic scanning and MRI.
A prospective analysis of patients referred by Otolaryngologists from a tertiary hospital for detailed assessment of the posterior cranial fossa was undertaken. The objectives were to evaluate radiological characteristics of the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) within the cerebellopontine angle (CPA) and the internal auditory canal (IAC), and to correlate these characteristics with ipsilateral auditory symptoms. Three hundred and thirty-two consecutive adult patients who presented with unilateral auditory symptoms were studied. All patients were referred by the Department of Otolaryngology at City Hospital, Birmingham, from October 1999 to October 2001. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with three-dimensional Fourier Transformation Constructive Interference in Steady State (3D FT-CISS) was the imaging strategy used to investigate each patient. Six hundred and sixty-four sides were studied and the AICA loop was identified in all patients. Using a simple anatomical classification to type the loops: there were 412 type I loops (within the CPA), 202 type II loops (at the porus acousticus, extending up to 50% of IAC) and 50 type III loops (extending beyond 50% of IAC). There was a statistically significant association with unilateral hearing loss and type II and III AICA loops (P = 0.016 and P = 0.006 respectively). An association between the presence of a large diameter vascular loop in the CPA and unilateral auditory symptoms was not found to be significant (P > 0.05).
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