Lloyd G A, Phelps P D, Du Boulay G H
Br J Radiol. 1980 Jul;53(631):631-41. doi: 10.1259/0007-1285-53-631-631.
High-resolution computerized tomography (CT) has been used to investigate abnormalities of the ear and petrous bone. Congenital, traumatic, infective and neoplastic lesions have been evaluated in 30 patients with proven pathology. Some bone changes including abnormalities of the auditory ossicles have been better demonstrated than by conventional tomographic technigues, and high-resolution CT has some advantages in demonstrating both soft tissue abnormality and bone changes in the middle ear in primary neoplastic disease and secondary cholesteatoma. The absence of any practical means of taking sagittal sections with the present scanner design limits the usefulness of high resolution CT of the petrous bone, but this study has shown that the technique may now take its place as an important complementary procedure to pluridirectional tomography.