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Cochlear signal alterations using pseudo-color perceptual enhancement for patients with sensorineural hearing loss

机译:Cochlear signal alterations using pseudo-color perceptual enhancement for patients with sensorineural hearing loss

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摘要

Background Neuroimaging detection of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL)-related temporal bone abnormalities is limited (20-50%). We hypothesize that cochlear signal differences in gray-scale data may exceed the threshold of human eye detection. Gray-scale images can be post-processed to enhance perception of tonal difference using "pseudo-color" schemes. Objective To compare patients with unilateral SNHL to age-matched normal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) exams for "labyrinthine color differences" employing pseudo-color post-processing. Materials and methods The MRI database at an academic children's hospital was queried for "hearing loss." Only unilateral SNHL cases were analyzed. Sixty-nine imaging exams were reviewed. Thirteen age-matched normal MR exams in children without hearing loss were chosen for comparison. Pseudo-color was applied with post-processing assignment of specific hues to each gray-scale intensity value. Gray-scale and pseudo-color images were qualitatively evaluated for signal asymmetries by a board-certified neuroradiologist blinded to the side of SNHL. Results Twenty-six SNHL (mean: 7.6 +/- 3 years) and 13 normal control exams (mean: 7.3 +/- 4 years) were included. All patients had normal gray-scale cochlear signal and all controls had symmetrical pseudo-color signal. However, pseudo-color images revealed occult asymmetries localizing to the SNHL ear with lower values in 38%. Ninety-one percent of these cases showed concordance between the side of pseudo-color positivity and the side of hearing loss. Conclusion Pseudo-color perceptual image enhancement reveals intra-labyrinthine fluid alterations on MR exams in children with unilateral SNHL. Pseudo-color image enhancement techniques improve detection of cochlear pathology and could have therapeutic implications.

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