• Neurosurgery · Jun 2007

    Case Reports

    Cerebellopontine angle cyst compressing the vagus nerve: case report.

    • Melanie G Hayden, Stephen V Tornabene, Andy Nguyen, Apurva Thekdi, and John F Alksne.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California, USA.
    • Neurosurgery. 2007 Jun 1; 60 (6): E1150; discussion 1150.

    ObjectiveThe cerebellopontine angle (CPA) is a rare location for an arachnoid cyst. We describe a patient with a CPA arachnoid cyst who presented with hoarseness (unilateral vocal cord paralysis) and dysphagia secondary to isolated compression of the vagus nerve. This rare presentation of a CPA arachnoid cyst has not been reported previously.Clinical PresentationThe patient described is a 50-year-old man who experienced a precipitous onset of hoarseness and dsyphagia. An otolaryngological evaluation revealed right-sided vocal cord paralysis. Brain magnetic resonance images displayed a cystic mass at the right CPA and anterior displacement of the vagus nerve.InterventionThe patient underwent retrosigmoidal craniectomy with cyst fenestration, which was well tolerated. Intraoperatively, Cranial Nerve X was found splayed over the cyst and was consequently decompressed.ConclusionPostoperatively, the patient's dysphagia completely resolved. However, the results of a laryngeal electromyocardiogram revealed minimal evidence of recovery in the affected vocal fold, and the patient continued to suffer from dysphonia. Although CPA arachnoid cysts are rare, they should be considered when a patient presents with an isolated cranial nerve palsy. Treatment options include cyst fenestration and cranial nerve decompression.

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