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[Tinnitus in patients with hemifacial spasm: a treatable combination?]
BACKGROUND: About 5-15% of people in the Western world will suffer from an extended period of tinnitus during their lifetime. This is often a non-treatable, disabling disorder. Tinnitus can be classified as pulsatile or non-pulsatile. Pulsatile tinnitus can be caused by a treatable neurovascular compression.
CASE DESCRIPTION: Here we describe two patients, a 68-year old woman and 40-year old man suffering from pulsatile tinnitus and hemifacial spams due to neurovascular compression of the facial and acoustic nerve in the anterior cranial fossa. After microvascular decompression using the Jannetta procedure, in which a sponge was placed between the blood vessel and the nerve, the tinnitus and hemifacial spasm disappeared.
CONCLUSION: Recognition of hemifacial spasm in patients with tinnitus is important because the symptoms are treatable when it is due to neurovascular compression. Because hemifacial spasm can manifest in subtle forms - for instance unilateral blinking - this important symptom can easily be overlooked.
CASE DESCRIPTION: Here we describe two patients, a 68-year old woman and 40-year old man suffering from pulsatile tinnitus and hemifacial spams due to neurovascular compression of the facial and acoustic nerve in the anterior cranial fossa. After microvascular decompression using the Jannetta procedure, in which a sponge was placed between the blood vessel and the nerve, the tinnitus and hemifacial spasm disappeared.
CONCLUSION: Recognition of hemifacial spasm in patients with tinnitus is important because the symptoms are treatable when it is due to neurovascular compression. Because hemifacial spasm can manifest in subtle forms - for instance unilateral blinking - this important symptom can easily be overlooked.
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