De Ridder Dirk, Ryu Hiroshi, Møller Aage R, Nowé Vicky, Van de Heyning Paul, Verlooy Jan
Department of Neurosurgery and Otorhinolaryngology, University Hospital Antwerp, Wilrijkstraat 10, 2650 Edegem, Antwerp, Belgium.
Neurosurgery. 2004 Feb;54(2):381-8; discussion 388-90. doi: 10.1227/01.neu.0000103420.53487.79.
The functional anatomy (i.e., tonotopy) of the human cochlear nerve is unknown. A better understanding of the tonotopy of the central nervous system segment of the cochlear nerve and of the pathophysiology of tinnitus might help to ameliorate the disappointing results obtained with microvascular decompressions in patients with tinnitus.
We assume that vascular compression of the cochlear nerve can induce a frequency-specific form of hearing loss and that when the nerve is successfully decompressed, this hearing loss can recuperate. Thirty-one patients underwent a microvascular decompression of the vestibulocochlear nerve for vertigo or tinnitus. Preoperative audiograms were subtracted from postoperative audiograms, regardless of the surgical result with regard to the tinnitus and vertigo, because the hearing improvement could be the only sign of the vascular compression. The frequency of maximal improvement was then correlated to the site of vascular compression. A tonotopy of the cochlear nerve was thus obtained.
A total of 18 correlations can be made between the site of compression and postoperative maximal hearing improvement frequency when 5-dB hearing improvement is used as threshold, 13 when 10-dB improvement is used as threshold. A clear distribution can be seen, with clustering of low frequencies at the posterior and inferior side of the cochlear nerve, close to the brainstem, and close to the root exit zone of the facial nerve. High frequencies are distributed closer to the internal acoustic meatus and more superiorly along the posterior aspect of the cochlear nerve.
The tonotopic organization of the cisternal segment of the cochlear nerve has an oblique rotatory structure as a result of the rotatory course of the cochlear nerve in the posterior fossa. Knowledge of this tonotopic organization of the auditory nerve in its cisternal course might benefit surgeons who perform microvascular decompression operations for the vestibulocochlear compression syndrome, especially in the treatment of unilateral severe tinnitus.
人类耳蜗神经的功能解剖结构(即音频定位)尚不清楚。更好地了解耳蜗神经中枢神经系统段的音频定位以及耳鸣的病理生理学,可能有助于改善耳鸣患者微血管减压术令人失望的治疗效果。
我们假设耳蜗神经的血管压迫可导致特定频率形式的听力损失,并且当神经成功减压时,这种听力损失可以恢复。31例患者因眩晕或耳鸣接受了前庭蜗神经微血管减压术。无论耳鸣和眩晕的手术结果如何,均将术后听力图减去术前听力图,因为听力改善可能是血管压迫的唯一迹象。然后将最大改善频率与血管压迫部位相关联。由此获得了耳蜗神经的音频定位。
当以5 dB听力改善为阈值时,压迫部位与术后最大听力改善频率之间共有18个相关性;以10 dB改善为阈值时,有13个相关性。可以看到一个清晰的分布,低频集中在耳蜗神经靠近脑干的后侧和下侧,靠近面神经的根出口区。高频分布更靠近内耳道,沿着耳蜗神经后侧更靠上的位置。
由于耳蜗神经在后颅窝呈旋转走行,耳蜗神经脑池段的音频定位组织具有倾斜旋转结构。了解听觉神经在脑池段的这种音频定位组织,可能会使为前庭蜗神经压迫综合征进行微血管减压手术的外科医生受益,尤其是在治疗单侧严重耳鸣时。