Eagle jugular syndrome: a morphometric computed study on styloid process orientation

G. Mantovani, P. De Bonis, M. Cavallo, Paolo Zamboni, A. Scerrati
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Abstract

Cerebral venous drainage impairment is related to a wide spectrum of pathologies, both acute or chronic. Among the most intriguing and less explained there are those caused by a long-lasting compression on internal jugular vein (IJV), mono or bilaterally. Recently, a jugular variant of the Eagle syndrome has been described,1,2 in which an elongated styloid process, coming from the mastoid tip down through the neck, compresses the IJV (more frequently J3) in its passage on the C1 anterior arch. Interestingly, those patients often complaint of typical symptoms of intracranial hypertension, such as headache (not frequent in classic Eagle syndrome), tinnitus, dizziness. They also seem to have an increased risk of perimesencephalic hemorrhages. Conceptually, it is not the styloid process length in itself to determine the compression, but rather its spatial orientation. We could therefore expect to find patients suffering from Eagle jugular syndrome who present normal or short styloid process, but in close proximity to C1. To test this hypothesis, we are developing a novel software to analyze 3-D spatial orientation of styloid process in patient with a previously diagnosed Eagle jugular syndrome compared to healthy controls. Methods We collected cervical computed tomography angiography (CTA) images from 8 patients with EJS confirmed by venous angiography at our institution, and a control group of 7 random patients, homogenous for sex and age. A blind operator created with a dedicated pre-existing software3, an editable 3-D model (.stl file) of the 3 main region of interest (ROI), namely: right styloid, left styloid, C1 anterior arch. Starting from this dataset, our software, written using the open-source package management system Anaconda4 ver. 2-2.4.0, compares all the possible couples of points between each styloid process and the C1 arch, detecting the minimum and maximum distance. Then, it provides the mean spatial orientation of the process respect the CT-axis: x-axis (from left to right), y-axis (from occiput to nose) and z-axis (cranio-caudal). Results By now we included 15 patients (8 cases, 7 controls), homogeneous for sex and age. Preliminary data (Table 1), although not statistically significant yet, seems to indicate that Eagle jugular patients effectively have a more vertical styloid process, meaning an angle between styloid and y-axis greater than controls, rather than a longer one. Conclusions Our preliminary results could confirm that spatial orientation is more important in Eagle jugular patients than styloid process length. This study is currently ongoing and we planned to enroll at least 20 subjects for each arm. At the same time, we are collecting data from patients with carotic variant of Eagle syndrome, to better characterize morphometric structure of styloid in various subset of this pathology.
鹰颈静脉综合征:茎突方向的形态计量学计算研究
脑静脉引流障碍与多种急性或慢性病理有关。其中最有趣的和解释较少的是那些长期压迫颈内静脉(IJV),单侧或双侧引起的。最近,一种颈静脉变型的Eagle综合征被报道1,2,其中从乳突尖端向下穿过颈部的细长茎突压迫C1前弓上的IJV(更常见的是J3)。有趣的是,这些患者经常主诉颅内高压的典型症状,如头痛(在经典鹰综合征中不常见)、耳鸣、头晕。他们似乎也有脑出血的风险增加。从概念上讲,决定压缩的不是茎突本身的长度,而是它的空间方向。因此,我们可以期望发现患有鹰颈静脉综合征的患者表现出正常或短茎突,但靠近C1。为了验证这一假设,我们正在开发一种新的软件来分析先前诊断为鹰颈综合征的患者茎突的三维空间方向,并与健康对照组进行比较。方法收集本院经静脉血管造影证实的8例EJS患者的颈椎ct血管造影(CTA)图像,并随机选取7例性别和年龄均相同的患者作为对照组。一个盲人操作员用一个专门的预先存在的软件创建,一个可编辑的3-D模型。3个主要感兴趣区(ROI),即:右茎突、左茎突、C1前弓。从这个数据集开始,我们的软件,使用开源包管理系统Anaconda4编写。2-2.4.0,比较每个茎突与C1弓之间所有可能的点对,检测最小和最大距离。然后,它提供了相对于ct轴的过程的平均空间方向:x轴(从左到右),y轴(从枕部到鼻子)和z轴(颅尾)。结果纳入15例患者(8例,7例对照),性别和年龄均相同。初步数据(表1),虽然还没有统计学意义,但似乎表明Eagle颈静脉患者茎突更垂直,即茎突与y轴之间的夹角比对照组大,而不是更长。结论我们的初步结果可以证实,在鹰颈静脉患者中,空间取向比茎突长度更重要。该研究目前正在进行中,我们计划每组至少招募20名受试者。同时,我们正在收集来自Eagle综合征颈动脉变异型患者的数据,以更好地表征该病理不同亚群的茎突形态计量结构。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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