Pulsatile Tinnitus Glomus Tympanicum

Glomus tumors are rare, and the majority do not present with isolated pulsatile tinnitus.  In other words, other symptoms are usually present in addition to pulsatile tinnitus.  In fact, if PT is the only symptom of a presumed glomus tumor, it should give rise to a though that perhaps it is not glomus after all.  Some dural fistulas can look a lot like a glomus, believe it or not.  We have seen more than a few misdiagnosed that way.  If it is in fact a glomus, usually other symptoms are present as well.  Nevertheless, Glomus Jugulare and Glomus Tympanicum tumors are well-known to cause pulsatile tinnitus.  Standard MRI with contrast and MRA are very good for picking up these tumors, except perhaps a small glomus tympanicum.  Temporal bone CT has historically been even better than MRI for glomus, especially glomus tympanicum — an unusual situation since for most tumors MRI is a better test.  In other words, if you’ve had a negative temporal bone CT and negative MRI brain with contrast, the chances of having a glomus tympanicum or jugulare are pretty much zero.

What is a glomus? Glomus tumors are part of “paraganglioma” family of tumors.  There are different types throughout the body. Most are “benign” but can be locally aggressive and pretty much all of them require treatment.  Symptoms depend on location and endocrine activity.  Glomus Tympanicum usually begins to grow along the cochlear promontory.  Early involvement of the ossicular chain is common.  Therefore, patients present with hearing loss before anything else as a rule.

The mainstay of glomus tympanicum treatment is surgical resection, unlike glomus jugulare which is increasingly being treated by a type of radiation called gamma knife.  PT symptoms may not improve for some time after gamma knife, and may do so gradually. Particle embolization of the tumor can be effective in minimizing PT until radiation effects kick in, but this is typically not done because PT is tolerable enough to wait.

Why does glomus cause PT?  Because it is so damn vascular.  These tumors have such tremendous blood supply that the ear is literally hear blood flow through the tumor if it is large enough and close enough to the ear.  Unlike glomus jugulare, which usually requires embolization prior to resection, small glomus tympanicum tumors can be resected without embolization.  Embolization is a procedure where blood supply to the tumor is blocked to make it less bloody during surgery.  Various embolization agents are used, depending on location, experience, personal preference, etc.

Glomus tumors can have endocrine activity.  A minority will secrete catecholamines and present special challenges during both embolization and resection due to catecholamine-related blood pressure instability

Here is a typical glomus tympanicum tumor.  Although CT temporal bone is the study of choice for these lesions, this particular tumor was first picked up on an MRI as an enhancing mass in the left middle ear cavity.

FLAIR

T1-post contrast

Coronal reconstruction of volumetric T1-post

CT Temporal bone of same patient. Classic mass along cochlear promontory

Classic coronal view

Glomus tumors can be multiple and hereditary — see here for more information for example. In this patient, a left glomus jugulare was previously treated by radiation.  The really bright, dense stuff is embolic material from a treatment at another institution.  We do not use Onyx for embolization of these kinds of tumors, however others may

Now patient presents with a right-sided glomus.  There is prominent involvement of the cochlear promontory however it appears that the tumor also extends into the jugular bulb region.  It was called “jugulotympanicum”.  I don’t know if something like this really exists — what does exist is a jugulare growing into the middle ear, and tympanicum extending towards the jugular bulb.

Coronal views. This was radiated as well.

Back to Diagnosis and Treatment of Pulsatile Tinnitus