MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING

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MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING
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MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING, in Visit Clinic

MRI of the left cerebellopontine angle to detect tumors, nerve compression, and causes of hearing loss or dizziness 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 MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING Test in Visit Clinic?

An MRI of the left cerebellopontine (CP) angle creates detailed pictures of the small space near the brainstem and inner ear. It shows nerves, the cerebellum edge, and surrounding tissue. This area contains nerves for hearing and facial movement. The scan helps find tumors, cysts, or nerve compression. It also detects changes from inflammation or blood vessel problems. Doctors use the images to explain symptoms, plan surgery or radiation, and monitor known lesions over time. The test is noninvasive and gives clear information that other exams may miss. Results guide treatment choices and follow-up care for balance, hearing, or facial nerve issues.

MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING Test in Visit Clinic?

MRI SCAN LEFT CP ANGLE(PTAM) SCREENING is typically ordered as a focused head MRI when symptoms suggest a problem near the inner ear and brainstem. It is used when patients have hearing loss, ringing in the ear, balance problems, facial numbness, or unexplained headaches. The scan helps diagnose tumors (like vestibular schwannoma), cysts, inflammation, or vascular issues. Abnormal findings are usually caused by growths, infection, or structural changes, and a family history of nerve tumors can make this screening more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is CP angle in brain MRI in Visit Clinic?plus

The cerebellopontine (CP) angle is the CSF-filled space at the junction of the cerebellum and pons, seen on axial brain MRI. It contains cranial nerves VII and VIII and nearby vessels. MRI evaluates this angle for asymmetry or masses—classically vestibular schwannomas, meningiomas, and epidermoids—which can compress nerves and brainstem, causing hearing loss, tinnitus, or ataxia.

What is a normal CP angle in Visit Clinic?plus

On a chest X‑ray, the normal costophrenic (CP) angles are sharp, acute recesses at the lung bases seen on upright films. They should appear well defined; blunting or loss of sharpness suggests pleural fluid (effusion), pleural thickening, or consolidation. Small effusions can cause subtle blunting, while complete obliteration indicates a larger fluid collection or other pathology needing further evaluation.

What is the difference between MRI and MRI CP in Visit Clinic?plus

MRI is a non‑invasive scan using magnetic fields and radio waves to image anatomy and disease without injections. MRI CP commonly means contrast‑enhanced MRI (often C/P = plain and post‑contrast), where a gadolinium dye is given to better show blood vessels, inflammation, infections and tumours. Contrast improves lesion detection but has small risks (allergic reaction, kidney-related cautions).

What is a left CP angle tumor in Visit Clinic?plus

A left CP angle tumor is a mass in the left cerebellopontine angle — the space between the cerebellum and pons near cranial nerves VII and VIII. Common types include vestibular schwannoma and meningioma. Symptoms: hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo, facial numbness/weakness and balance problems. Diagnosis is by MRI with contrast; treatment ranges from monitoring to microsurgery or stereotactic radiosurgery depending on size and symptoms.

What are the symptoms of CP angle in Visit Clinic?plus

Cerebellopontine (CP) angle lesions often cause progressive unilateral sensorineural hearing loss and persistent tinnitus. Patients may have balance problems, dizziness or vertigo, and gait unsteadiness. Facial numbness, tingling or weakness from trigeminal or facial nerve involvement can occur, sometimes with swallowing or speech changes. Large lesions may cause headache, nausea, vomiting or signs of raised intracranial pressure.

What is a CP MRI in Visit Clinic?plus

A CP MRI is an MRI scan done to evaluate the brain in someone with cerebral palsy. It uses magnetic fields and radio waves to create detailed images that can show typical causes—such as periventricular white‑matter injury, cortical malformations, or hypoxic‑ischemic damage. The test is noninvasive, may need sedation for young children, and helps with diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment planning.