Published in:
01-04-2003 | Head and Neck Radiology
Subacute mandibular and hypoglossal nerve denervation causing oedema of the masticator space and tongue
Authors:
T.L. Ho, K.W. Lee, H.J. Lee
Published in:
Neuroradiology
|
Issue 4/2003
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Abstract
We report the MRI of five patients with denervation oedema in the head and neck. Four had denervation oedema in one masticator space caused by a skull-base tumour invading the ipsilateral foramen ovale. Another case had denervation oedema confined to the half of the tongue ipsilateral to oral reconstruction surgery which involved mandibulectomy, free flap repair and wide excision of a buccal mucosal carcinoma. Inversion-recovery and/or T2-weighted spin-echo images showed increased signal in the affected areas. Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted images revealed enhancement of the muscles. There was no evidence of tumour or infection in the masticator space or tongue. It is important to differentiate denervation oedema from other disease processes causing high signal on T2-weighted images, such as tumour infiltration and soft-tissue infection.