Atypical skull-base osteomyelitis is a rare but fatal disease that usually involves infection of the ethmoid, sphenoid, occipital, or temporal bones that form the skull base. Unlike typical (so-called otogenic), atypical skull-base osteomyelitis has no otogenic cause. Instead, some authors call atypical skull-base osteomyelitis sinonasal, since the infection most often originates from the nose and paranasal sinuses. Diagnosing and treating this disease is challenging. To assist in managing atypical skull-base osteomyelitis, a review of the most recent literature, with patient cases and multidisciplinary perspectives from otolaryngologists, neurosurgeons, radiologists, infectious disease specialists, pathologists, and clinical microbiologists, is provided in this paper.
CITATION STYLE
Urbančič, J., Vozel, D., Battelino, S., Bošnjak, R., Kokošar Ulčar, B., Matos, T., … Zidar, N. (2023, May 1). Atypical Skull-Base Osteomyelitis: Comprehensive Review and Multidisciplinary Management Viewpoints. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI). https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8050254
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