Endolymphatic Hydrops in Patients With Vestibular Migraine and Concurrent Meniere's Disease

Intravenous contrast agent enhanced, high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging of the inner ear (iMRI) confirmed that patients with Menière's disease (MD) and vestibular migraine (VM) could present with endolymphatic hydrops (EH). The present study aimed to investigate EH characteristics and t...

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Published inFrontiers in neurology Vol. 12; p. 594481
Main Authors Oh, Sun-Young, Dieterich, Marianne, Lee, Bit Na, Boegle, Rainer, Kang, Jin-Ju, Lee, Na-Ri, Gerb, Johannes, Hwang, Seung-Bae, Kirsch, Valerie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 11.03.2021
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Summary:Intravenous contrast agent enhanced, high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging of the inner ear (iMRI) confirmed that patients with Menière's disease (MD) and vestibular migraine (VM) could present with endolymphatic hydrops (EH). The present study aimed to investigate EH characteristics and their interrelation to neurotologic testing in patients with VM, MD, or VM with concurrent MD (VM-MD). Sixty-two patients (45 females, aged 23-81 years) with definite or probable VM ( = 25, 19 definite), MD ( = 29, 17 definite), or showing characteristics of both diseases ( = 8) were included in this study. Diagnostic workup included neurotologic assessments including video-oculography (VOG) during caloric stimulation and head-impulse test (HIT), ocular and cervical vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (o/cVEMP), pure tone audiometry (PTA), as well as iMRI. EH's degree was assessed visually and via volumetric quantification using a probabilistic atlas-based segmentation of the bony labyrinth and volumetric local thresholding (VOLT). Although a relevant number of VM patients reported varying auditory symptoms (13 of 25, 52.0%), EH in VM was only observed twice. In contrast, EH in VM-MD was prevalent (2/8, 25%) and in MD frequent [23/29, 79.3%; χ (2) = 29.1, < 0.001, φ = 0.7]. Location and laterality of EH and neurophysiological testing classifications were highly associated (Fisher exact test, < 0.005). In MD, visual semi-quantitative grading and volumetric quantification correlated highly to each other ( = 0.8, < 0.005, two-sided) and to side differences in VOG during caloric irrigation (vestibular EH ipsilateral: = 0.6, < 0.05, two-sided). In VM, correlations were less pronounced. VM-MD assumed an intermediate position between VM and MD. Cochlear and vestibular hydrops can occur in MD and VM patients with auditory symptoms; this suggests inner ear damage irrespective of the diagnosis of MD or VM. The EH grades often correlated with auditory symptoms such as hearing impairment and tinnitus. Further research is required to uncover whether migraine is one causative factor of EH or whether EH in VM patients with auditory symptoms suggests an additional pathology due to MD.
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Reviewed by: Nicolas Perez-Fernandez, University Clinic of Navarra, Spain; Yasuhiro Chihara, Raffles Japanese Clinic, Singapore
This article was submitted to Neuro-Otology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Neurology
Edited by: Sergio Carmona, INEBA Institute of Neurosciences Buenos Aires, Argentina
These authors have contributed equally to this work
ISSN:1664-2295
1664-2295
DOI:10.3389/fneur.2021.594481