Abstract
The temporal bone pathology of a 71-year-old man with bilateral sensorineural hearing loss and facial paralysis caused by diffuse metastatic leptomeningeal carcinomatosis is described. The origin of this malignant disease was an extremely rare entity, a transitional cell carcinoma of the renal pelvis. Histopathologic study of the temporal bone demonstrated that tumor cells filled the internal auditory meatus, infiltrated into the Rosenthal's canals, and reached the scala tympani of the basal turn of the bilateral cochleas. The vestibulocochlear nerve and facial nerve trunks in the internal auditory meatus had been destroyed by the bilateral tumor invasion. Case reports of temporal bone metastases of leptomeningeal carcinomatosis published since 1965 were reviewed. In leptomeningeal carcinomatosis, it is suggested that tumor cells infiltrate the internal auditory meatus of both ears simultaneously from the cerebrospinal fluid, involving the seventh and eighth nerve trunks, and then cause bilateral sensorineural hearing loss and facial paralysis.
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