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Improved Bone Conduction Hearing after Middle Ear Surgery: Investigation of the Improvement Mechanism

Authors :
Jungho Ha
Hantai Kim
Gayoung Gu
Yun-Hoon Choung
Source :
Clinical and experimental otorhinolaryngology.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objectives. When performing middle ear operations, such as ossiculoplasty or stapes surgery, patients and surgeons expect an improvement in air conduction (AC) hearing, but generally not in bone conduction (BC). However, BC improvement has often been observed after surgery, and the present study investigated this phenomenon.Methods. We reviewed the preoperative and postoperative surgical outcomes of 583 patients who underwent middle ear surgery. BC improvement was defined as a BC threshold decrease of >15 dB at two or more frequencies. Subjects in group A underwent staged ossiculoplasty after canal wall up mastoidectomy (CWUM), group B underwent staged ossiculoplasty after canal wall down mastoidectomy (CWDM), group C underwent ossiculoplasty only (thus, they had no prior history of CWUM or CWDM), and group D received stapes surgery. We created a hypothetical circuit model to explain this phenomenon.Results. BC improvement was detected in 12.8% of group A, 9.1% of group B, and 8.5% of group C. The improvement was more pronounced in group D (27.0%). A larger gain in AC hearing was weakly correlated with greater BC improvement (Pearson’s r=0.395 in group A, P

Subjects

Subjects :
Otorhinolaryngology
Surgery

Details

ISSN :
19768710
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical and experimental otorhinolaryngology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e0555829091421df123ea3b3f2661aa7