# Investigation of the Positional Relationship Between the Tympanic Segment of the Chorda Tympani and the Incus in Patients With Otosclerosis or Middle Ear Anomalies Using Ultra-High Resolution Computed Tomography

**Authors:** Aya Katsura, Shinsuke Kaneshiro, Harukazu Hiraumi, Makiko Obara, Akio Tamura, Kiyoto Shiga, Kunihiro Yoshioka

PMC · DOI: 10.1155/rrp/9486057 · 2025-02-20

## TL;DR

This study shows that ultra-high-resolution CT scans can accurately predict the spatial relationship between two ear structures in patients with ear conditions.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates the accuracy of U-HRCT in predicting the positional relationship of the chorda tympani and incus in otosclerosis or middle ear anomalies.

## Key findings

- U-HRCT measurements were close to surgical measurements, with a mean distance of 0.7 mm versus 0.9 mm.
- U-HRCT correctly predicted the attachment of the chorda tympani to the incus in all three cases observed.
- Nine out of 13 patients had U-HRCT and surgical measurements in the same 0.5 mm group.

## Abstract

Objective: This study evaluated the sensitivity and accuracy of ultra-high-resolution computed tomography (U-HRCT) in predicting the relationship between the chorda tympani and the long crus of the incus in patients with otosclerosis or middle ear anomalies.

Methods: Thirteen patients with otosclerosis or middle ear anomalies were enrolled in this study (three males and ten females; mean age, 41.6 years; range, 7–67 years). The patients underwent U-HRCT (Aquilion Precision; Canon Medical Systems, Japan). Multiplanar reconstruction images were obtained, and the distance between the chorda tympani and the long crus of the incus was measured in a plane parallel to the superstructure of the stapes. In addition, the distance between the two structures was measured during surgery. Subsequently, distances of every 0.5 mm obtained using the two modalities were grouped and compared.

Results: The U-HRCT-based evaluation revealed that the mean distance from the chorda tympani to the long crus of the incus was 0.7 mm, whereas the mean actual distance during the surgery was 0.9 mm. In nine of the 13 patients, the U-HRCT-based and actual distances belonged to the same group. In four patients, the U-HRCT measurements were smaller than the actual distances. The chorda tympani was attached to the long crus of the incus in three cases, and U-HRCT precisely predicted this finding in all three cases.

Conclusion: U-HRCT is useful for detecting the relationship between the chorda tympani and the long crus of the incus in patients with otosclerosis or middle ear anomalies.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** otosclerosis (MONDO:0005349)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Otosclerosis (MESH:D010040), Middle Ear Anomalies (MESH:C564849)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11867719/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11867719