Summary: | Abstract This study aimed to investigate the incidence of mastoid effusion on temporal bone magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with Bell’s palsy (BP) and Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS), and evaluate the usefulness of mastoid effusion in early differential diagnosis between BP and RHS. The incidence of mastoid effusion on 3.0 T—temporal bone MRI, which was conducted within 10 days after the onset of acute facial nerve palsy, was compared between 131 patients with BP and 33 patients with RHS. Findings of mastoid cavity on temporal bone MRI were classified into three groups as normal mastoid, mastoid effusion, and sclerotic change, and the incidence of ipsilesional mastoid effusion was significantly higher in RHS than BP (P < 0.001). Tympanic membrane was normal in 7 of 14 RHS patients with mastoid effusion, and injected without middle ear effusion in 7 patients. This study highlights significantly higher incidence of ipsilesional mastoid effusion in RHS than BP, and suggests that the presence of mastoid effusion may provide additional information for differential diagnosis between RHS and BP.
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