Congenital aural cholesteatoma: Results of surgery in 60 cases

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Abstract

From 1978 to 1993, 59 patients (60 ears) with congenital middle ear cholesteatoma were treated at the House Ear Clinic. The median patient age at presentation was 5 years, and the period of postoperative follow-up was 4.8 years. An intact canal wall was maintained in 58 of 60 cases and a closed middle ear space in all cases. In 12 operations, lateral graft tympanoplasty eradicated the cholesteatoma in one stage; 32 patients required a second-stage surgery to rule out recurrence, and the remaining 16 cases required three or more operations to eradicate disease and reconstruct the hearing mechanism. Thirty-five (63%) of 56 patients had a postoperative air-conduction threshold pure-tone average (PTA) within 10 dB of the best bone-conduction PTA; 91% were within 20 dB. Average speech reception threshold improved from 32 dB hearing level (HL) preoperatively to 20 dB HL postoperatively. © The American Laryngological, Rhinological & Otological Society, Inc.

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Doyle, K. J., & Luxford, W. M. (1995). Congenital aural cholesteatoma: Results of surgery in 60 cases. Laryngoscope, 105(3), 263–267. https://doi.org/10.1288/00005537-199503000-00008

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