Surgical results of canal wall reconstruction tympanoplasty in middle ear cholesteatoma

Nihon Jibiinkoka Gakkai kaiho
K NomuraJ I Suzuki

Abstract

Materials were 236 ears of 213 patients with middle ear cholesteatoma undergoing canal wall reconstruction during 1993-1998. Subjects were followed up for at least 1 year after final operation. Of 236 ears, 147 (62%) underwent 1-stage operation and 89 ears (38%) required 2-stage operation. Hearing results were successful in 157 ears (67%) based on criteria proposed by the Otological Society of Japan. The success in ears undergoing 1-stage operation was 74% and 54% in ears undergoing 2-stage operation. Postoperative hearing and air-bone gap in the 1-stage group were significantly better than in the 2-stage group. For tympanoplasty, success was 97% in type I, 64% in type III, and 53% in type IV. The likelihood of undergoing 2-stage operation increased with the type of tympanoplasty, from type I to IV. Postoperative hearing was significantly worse in older age groups. Of the 89 ears, 13 (15%) had recurrent cholesteatoma and 29 (33%) had residual cholesteatoma at 2-stage operation. In the 135 in the 1-stage group, recurrent cholesteatoma was observed at follow-up in 13 ears (9.6%). When we analyzed clinical risk factors for both recurrent and residual cholesteatoma in age, gender, otorrhea, types of cholesteatoma, and types of tymp...Continue Reading

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