Imaging of Orbital and Internal Auditory Canal Anomalies

Introduction

Congenital anomalies of the orbit and internal auditory canal (IAC) can present with vision loss, hearing loss, strabismus, or cosmetic deformity. CT and MRI are complementary:

  • CT โ†’ bony anatomy.
  • MRI โ†’ soft tissues, cranial nerves, brain association.

Part 1: Orbital Anomalies

1. Microphthalmos / Anophthalmos

  • Microphthalmos = abnormally small globe.
  • Anophthalmos = complete absence of globe (rare, may have small cystic remnant).
  • CT/MRI:
    • Microphthalmos โ†’ small globe, calcification possible (colobomatous cyst).
    • Associated with CNS anomalies (holoprosencephaly, midline defects).

2. Coloboma

  • Defect in closure of embryonic fissure.
  • CT/MRI: keyhole-shaped defect, often inferonasal.
  • Can be isolated or with CHARGE syndrome.

3. Dermoid / Epidermoid Cysts

  • Most common orbital congenital lesion.
  • CT: well-defined, fat attenuation, sometimes calcification.
  • MRI: dermoid = T1 hyperintense (fat), epidermoid = diffusion restriction.

4. Craniofacial Syndromes (Apert, Crouzon, Pfeiffer)

  • CT: shallow orbits โ†’ proptosis.
  • Often with midface hypoplasia, craniosynostosis.

Part 2: Internal Auditory Canal (IAC) Anomalies

Normal IAC Anatomy on MRI/CT

  • Contains: CN VII, VIII (vestibulocochlear), labyrinthine vessels.
  • IAC abnormalities are often linked to sensorineural hearing loss.

1. IAC Stenosis / Atresia

  • IAC diameter < 2 mm (normal ~ 4 mm).
  • CT: narrowed or absent IAC.
  • MRI: may show absent or hypoplastic CN VIII.
  • Clinical: congenital deafness, cochlear implant planning.

2. Vestibulocochlear Nerve Aplasia / Hypoplasia

  • MRI (3D CISS/FIESTA):
    • Absent or thin vestibulocochlear nerve.
    • CN VII usually present.
  • Associated with cochlear hypoplasia.

3. Enlarged Vestibular Aqueduct (EVA)

  • One of the most common congenital inner ear anomalies.
  • CT: vestibular aqueduct > 1.5 mm.
  • Often associated with sensorineural hearing loss, Pendred syndrome.

4. Cochlear Nerve Canal Deficiency

  • CT: bony canal < 1.4 mm.
  • Often correlates with cochlear nerve hypoplasia on MRI.

Imaging Pearls โœจ

  • Orbit โ†’ think size (microphthalmos/anophthalmos), shape (coloboma), and cystic lesions (dermoid).
  • IAC โ†’ always check size of IAC and presence of nerves on MRI.
  • CT + MRI combination is essential in surgical/implant planning.

๐Ÿ“Š Quick Comparison: Orbital vs IAC Anomalies on Imaging

CategoryAnomalyCT FindingsMRI Findings
Orbital AnomaliesMicrophthalmos / AnophthalmosSmall or absent globe, may see cystic remnant or calcificationHypoplastic globe, associated CNS anomalies
ColobomaKeyhole-shaped defect in globe, usually inferonasalDefect with cystic extension, better delineation of optic nerve involvement
Dermoid CystWell-defined, fat attenuation, sometimes calcificationT1 hyperintense (fat), no enhancement; restricted diffusion if epidermoid
Craniofacial Syndromes (Apert, Crouzon)Shallow orbits, proptosis, craniosynostosisConfirms orbital crowding, associated intracranial anomalies
IAC AnomaliesIAC Stenosis / AtresiaIAC < 2 mm or absent bony canalAbsent / hypoplastic CN VIII on high-res MRI
Vestibulocochlear Nerve Aplasia / HypoplasiaMay see associated cochlear canal narrowingAbsent or thin CN VIII on 3D CISS/FIESTA; CN VII usually preserved
Enlarged Vestibular Aqueduct (EVA)Aqueduct > 1.5 mm at midpoint or operculumConfirms endolymphatic sac enlargement, better soft tissue detail
Cochlear Nerve Canal DeficiencyBony canal < 1.4 mmCorrelates with cochlear nerve hypoplasia or absence

๐Ÿ“ Key Takeaway

  • Orbit โ†’ size (micro/anophthalmos), shape (coloboma), and cysts (dermoid).
  • IAC โ†’ always assess canal diameter + presence of CN VIII on MRI (especially before cochlear implant surgery).
  • CT = bones / size, MRI = nerves / soft tissue / associations.

โœ… Conclusion

  • Orbital anomalies: best evaluated with CT (bones, fat, calcifications) and MRI (soft tissue, CNS associations).
  • IAC anomalies: require high-resolution CT (bone canal) and MRI (nerve integrity).
  • Recognizing these findings is crucial in children with visual or auditory developmental delay and in pre-operative assessment for cochlear implants.

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