CT Scan Mastoid Axial And Coronal

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CT Scan Mastoid Axial And Coronal
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CT Scan Mastoid Axial And Coronal, in Visit Clinic

High-resolution CT images of the mastoid to detect infection, bone damage, and guide ear surgery in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a CT Scan Mastoid Axial And Coronal Test in Visit Clinic?

A CT scan of the mastoid (axial and coronal views) takes detailed X-ray pictures of the temporal bone behind the ear. It shows bone structure, mastoid air cells, the middle ear, and nearby spaces. This test helps find infections, bone erosion, fractures, cholesteatoma, and congenital changes. It is important for diagnosing causes of ear pain, drainage, hearing loss, or balance problems. Doctors use the images to plan surgery, guide treatment, check for complications, and monitor recovery after interventions. The axial and coronal views give complementary angles for a clear picture of the ear anatomy.

CT Scan Mastoid Axial And Coronal Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

CT Scan Mastoid Axial And Coronal Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The CT Scan Mastoid Axial And Coronal test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a CT Scan Mastoid Axial And Coronal Test in Visit Clinic?

CT SCAN MASTOID AXIAL AND CORONAL is an ENT imaging study often ordered as a temporal bone protocol. It is requested for symptoms like ear pain, persistent discharge, hearing loss, dizziness, or after head trauma. It helps diagnose mastoiditis, cholesteatoma, fractures, congenital anomalies, and tumors. Abnormal findings usually result from infection, chronic disease, trauma, or growths. A family history of congenital ear problems or recurrent infections may make this scan more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is the difference between coronal and axial CT scan in Visit Clinic?plus

Coronal and axial CT scans differ by imaging plane. Axial (transverse) images are horizontal slices from head to feet, showing cross-sections useful for chest, abdomen, and brain evaluation. Coronal images are vertical frontal slices from front to back, better depicting height relationships and facial, sinus, spine, or lung pathology. Modern CT can reconstruct any plane from the same raw data.

What is a mastoid CT scan in Visit Clinic?plus

A mastoid CT scan is a high-resolution computed tomography of the mastoid portion of the temporal bone and middle ear. It produces thin-slice X‑ray images to evaluate mastoid air cells, middle ear structures, infections (mastoiditis), cholesteatoma, fractures, or chronic ear disease, and to guide surgery. The test is quick, outpatient, may rarely use contrast, and involves low radiation exposure.

What is temporal bone axial and coronal in Visit Clinic?plus

Temporal bone axial and coronal refer to CT imaging planes used in high-resolution temporal bone scans. Axial images are horizontal slices from top to bottom, ideal for evaluating the petrous bone, semicircular canals and cochlea; coronal images are vertical front‑to‑back slices, useful for assessing mastoid air cells, ossicles, middle ear and facial nerve canal. Together they detect fractures, infection, cholesteatoma and congenital anomalies.

What type of CT scan is used for ear in Visit Clinic?plus

A high-resolution CT (HRCT) of the temporal bone (thin-slice axial and coronal images, typically 0.5–1 mm) is the standard CT for ear evaluation. It provides excellent bony detail to assess ossicles, cochlea, mastoid air cells, and conditions like otosclerosis or cholesteatoma. Cone-beam CT is an alternative with lower radiation; MRI complements CT for soft-tissue or nerve assessment.

Which CT scan is best for the head in Visit Clinic?plus

For acute head injury or suspected bleeding, a non-contrast CT head is the best initial scan because it rapidly detects hemorrhage and fractures. For vascular detail (aneurysm or stroke clot), CT angiography is preferred. Contrast-enhanced CT is useful for tumors or infection. MRI provides greater soft-tissue detail but is not usually first-line in emergencies.

What are the three types of CT scans in Visit Clinic?plus

There are three common CT types: non-contrast (plain) CT, which images anatomy without injected dye; contrast-enhanced CT, where intravenous or oral contrast improves soft-tissue delineation and tumor or inflammation detection; and CT angiography (CTA), a rapid, contrast-based study optimized to visualize blood vessels and detect blockages, aneurysms, or vascular malformations. Used for trauma, cancer, and vascular assessment.