Prevalence of Scarpa’s ganglion enhancement on high-resolution MRI imaging

Author:

Siminski Clayton1ORCID,Benson John C1ORCID,Carlson Matthew L2,Lane John I1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

2. Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

Abstract

Background and Purpose The vestibular ganglion, or Scarpa’s ganglion, is a cluster of afferent vestibular neurons within the internal auditory canal (IAC). There is minimal literature describing enhancement of this region on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and its correlation to clinical symptoms. Here, we sought to find the prevalence of enhancement at Scarpa’s ganglion, and determine whether such enhancement correlates with demographics or clinical symptoms. Materials and Methods A retrospective review was performed of consecutive patients with an MRI of the IAC between 3/1/2021 and 5/20/2021. Two neuroradiologists independently reviewed for T1 and FLAIR enhancement of the Scarpa’s ganglion on post-contrast fat-saturated T1 and post-contrast FLAIR images. Discrepancies were agreed upon by consensus. Clinical variables (hearing loss, vestibular symptoms, tinnitus, and MRI indication) were gathered from a retrospective chart review. Results Eighty-nine patients were included (51 female); the mean age was 58 (range 19–85). The most common MRI indication was hearing loss ( n = 53). FLAIR enhancement was present on the right in 7 patients, on the left in 7 patients, and bilaterally in 6 patients. No enhancement was seen on post-contrast T1 images. There was no statistically significant correlation between consensus FLAIR on at least one side and age ( p = .74), gender ( p = .29), hearing loss ( p = .32), hearing loss side ( p = .39), type of hearing loss ( p = .87), vestibular symptoms ( p = .71), or tinnitus ( p = .81). Conclusions Enhancement is present in the minority of patients on post-contrast FLAIR images. If seen, it should be considered an uncommon but not unexpected finding with no clinical significance.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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