View clinical trials related to Endolymphatic Hydrops.
Filter by:The management of patients with a history of congenital CMV infection (whether symptomatic or asymptomatic at birth) is modeled on their usual management.
Imaging endolymphatic hydrops with 7T Sodium Imaging and 1.5 T gadolinium enhanced imaging: a comparison of diagnostic outcomes with 3T MRI Duration of study 24 months Study design Prospective cohort study Number of patients 16 patients 1. To evaluate whether imaging both 1.5T and 3T have an equivalent performance in terms of diagnosing MD ears with delayed post gadolinium enhanced MRI (applying quantitative and semi-quantitative analysis) 2. To compare the diagnostic performance of Sodium Imaging at 7T (applying semi-quantitative analysis) with that of delayed post gadolinium enhanced 3T MRI in distinguishing symptomatic from asymptomatic Meniere's Disease (MD) ears.
Endolymphatic hydrops is well known of the lay public in its primary form that is Ménière disease. Nowadays, the best w ay to approach it in vivo, is to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). However, endolymphatic hydrops don't limit itself to its primary form but cover a whole range of pathologies. The hypothesis is that patients with vestibular schwannomas are more likely to develop secondary saccular hydrops. The aim is to compare high-resolution T2-weighted images of the saccule in patients followed up for vestibular schwannomas with healthy volunteers and histological sections from cadavers in order to identify its changes. The secondary purpose of The protocol is to determine if vestibular and audiometric abnormalities could be related to this secondary hydrops more specifically than to the tumor size and localisation.