Publication | Open Access
Imaging of Intralabyrinthine Schwannomas: A Retrospective Study of 52 Cases with Emphasis on Lesion Growth
107
Citations
23
References
2008
Year
ILSs can account for up to 10% of all vestibulocochlear schwannomas in centers specializing in temporal bone imaging, grow in more than 50%, and are most frequently found intracochlearly, often anteriorly between the basal and second turn. Cochlear ILSs most often originate in the scala tympani and only later grow into the scala vestibuli. Growth can occur from the cochlea into the vestibule or vice versa through the anatomic open connection between the perilymphatic spaces in the scala vestibuli and around the saccule.
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