4.4 Article

Torrents of torment: turbulence as a mechanism of pulsatile tinnitus secondary to venous stenosis revealed by high-fidelity computational fluid dynamics

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROINTERVENTIONAL SURGERY
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages 732-737

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/neurintsurg-2020-016636

Keywords

blood flow; intervention; stenosis; stent; technology

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2018-04649]
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  3. Government of Ontario
  4. Ontario Research Fund -Research Excellence
  5. University of Toronto

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This study demonstrates that turbulence generated distal to a venous stenosis can be a cause of PT. High-fidelity CFD may be useful in identifying patients with such 'torrents' of flow, helping guide treatment decision-making.
Background Pulsatile tinnitus (PT) is a debilitating condition that can be caused by a vascular abnormality, such as an arterial or venous lesion. Although treatment of PT-related venous lesions has been shown to successfully cure patients of the associated 'tormenting' rhythmical sound, much controversy still exists regarding their role in the etiology of PT. Methods A patient presented with a history of worsening, unilateral PT. A partial venous sinus obstruction related to the large arachnoid granulation was detected on the right side, and subsequently stented at the right transverse sinus. High-fidelity computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was performed on a 3D model digitally segmented from the pre-stent venogram, with assumed pulsatile flow rates. A post-stent CFD model was also constructed from this. Data-driven sonification was performed on the CFD velocity data, blinded to the patient's self-reported sounds. Results The patient reported that the PT was completely resolved after stenting, and has had no recurrence of the symptoms after more than 2 years. CFD simulation revealed highly disturbed, turbulent-like flow at the sigmoid sinus close to auditory structures, producing a sonified audio signal that reproduced the subjective sonance of the patient's PT. No turbulence or sounds were evident at the stenosis, or anywhere in the post-stent model. Conclusions For the first time, turbulence generated distal to a venous stenosis is shown to be a cause of PT. High-fidelity CFD may be useful for identifying patients with such 'torrents' of flow, to help guide treatment decision-making.

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