14-otosclerosis

76
Otosclerosis Dr. Vishal Sharma

Transcript of 14-otosclerosis

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Otosclerosis

Dr. Vishal Sharma

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Definition

• Hereditary disease of bony labyrinth showing

replacement of lamellar enchondral bone by

irregularly laid new bone.

• New bone is spongy + more vascular in active

Otospongiosis but thicker & more cellular in

inactive Otosclerosis.

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Antonio Valsalva

First described

ankylosis of stapes

in 1741

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Adam Politzer

Coined the term

Otosclerosis

in 1893

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Friedrich Siebenmann

Coined the term

Otospongiosis

in 1912

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Epidemiology• Exact etiology is unknown (? Viral)

• Autosomal dominant: variable penetrance

• Race: common in white races & Indians

• Female : Male = 2 : 1

• Age: Common in 20 - 40 years

• Hormonal influence: es in pregnancy,

menopause, stress (trauma, surgery)

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Van der Hoeve syndrome Otosclerosis + osteogenesis imperfecta +

blue sclera

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Types of Otosclerosis

A. Stapedial

B. Cochlear: otosclerotic focus is seen over

Round window Promontory

C. Stapedial + cochlear: mixed type

D. Malignant: rapidly progressing cochlear

lesion with severe sensori-neural deafness.

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Types of Stapedial Otosclerosis1. Anterior focus (commonest): 2 mm anterior to oval

window. 2. Posterior focus: 2 mm behind oval window.

3. Circumferential: involves footplate margin only.

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Types of Stapedial Otosclerosis

4. Biscuit type: footplate involved, margin is free.

5. Obliterative: obliterates oval window completely.

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Symptoms of Otosclerosis

1. Deafness: Bilateral, slowly progressive

Conductive: stapedial otosclerosis

Sensori-neural: cochlear otosclerosis

Mixed: stapedial + cochlear otosclerosis

2. Soft, modulated, monotonous voice

3. Tinnitus & vertigo: in cochlear lesion

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Symptoms of Otosclerosis4. Paracusis Willisii: Pt has better hearing in noisy

surroundings (people increase their voice intensity

& pt’s speech discrimination becomes better).

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Thomas Willis (1621-1675)

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Otoscopy

Normal T.M. is seen in

most cases. Pinkish

colour over promontory

seen in otospongiosis

(2 - 10 % cases)

Schwartze sign /

Flamingo pink blush.

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Tuning Fork TestsRinne Weber A.B.C.

Stapedial Negative (BC > AC)

Lateralizes toDeaf ear

Normal

Cochlear Positive (AC > BC)

Lateralizes to Better ear

Decreased

Mixed Negative (BC > AC)

Lateralizes to Better ear

Decreased

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Gelle & Bing TestsVibrating tuning fork placed over mastoid & then:

External auditory canal is blocked in Bing test or

E.A.C. pressure ed by Siegalization in Gelle test

Bing Gelle

Otosclerosis No change No change

Normal / SNHL Intensity es Intensity es

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Pure Tone Audiometry• Low frequency conductive deafness

• Carhart’s notch in bone conduction at 2 KHz

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Carhart’s notch• Proposed theories

1. Stapes fixation disrupts normal ossicular

resonance (2000 Hz)

2. Normal compression mode of bone

conduction is disturbed because of relative

perilymph immobility

3. Mechanical artefact

• Carhart’s notch reverses with stapes surgery

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Speech Audiometry

Speech Discrimination Score (maximum score

achieved) is almost 100 %.

Speech Reception Threshold (intensity at which

50 % words are heard) is increased by the

amount of conductive hearing loss.

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Speech Audiometry

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Impedance Audiometry

• As curve seen in 40 %

cases of otosclerosis.

• Normal middle ear

pressure + decreased

middle ear compliance.

• Others have A curve.

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Stapedial reflex present

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Stapedial reflex absent

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C.T. scan temporal bone

200 coronal oblique cuts are taken

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Stapedial otosclerosis (coronal)

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Cochlear otospongiosis (axial)

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Differential Diagnosis

• Otitis Media with Effusion: type B tympanogram

• Adhesive Otitis Media: absence of T.M. mobility

• Tympanosclerosis: white patch on T.M.

• Ossicular discontinuity: type Ad tympanogram

• Congenital ossicular chain fixation: tympanotomy

• Malleus head fixation: tympanotomy

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History of development of stapes surgery

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Stapes mobilization: Kessel (1880), Rosen (1952)

Lateral semicircular canal fenestration: Holmgren

(1923), Sourdille (1932), Lempert (1938)

Complete Stapedectomy: Jack (1893), Shea (1956)

Partial Stapedectomy (posterior 1/3): Plester (1960)

Stapedotomy: Shea (1962), Marquet (1965)

Laser Stapedotomy: Perkins & Di Bartolomeo (1980)

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Johannes Kessel

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Samuel Rosen

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Gunnar Holmgren

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Maurice Sourdille

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Julius Lempert

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John J. Shea Jr.

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Inclusion criteria for surgery

• Pure Tone Average between 30 - 60 dB

• Air bone gap > 15 dB

• Speech discrimination score > 60 %

• Absence of sensorineural deafness

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Contraindications for surgery

Only hearing ear Meniere’s disease

Otitis media Otitis externa

Extremes of age Pregnancy

Professions: divers, high construction workers,

frequent travelers, noisy surroundings

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Surgical steps for

Stapedotomy

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Right T.M. (upright)

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Right T.M. (supine)

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Per-meatal Incision

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Tympanomeatal flap raised

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Bony overhang curetted

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Bony overhang curetted

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Chorda tympani preserved

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Chorda tympani separated

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Confirm footplate fixation

Checking for absence of round window reflex

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Depth measurement prosthesis

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Incudo-stapedial joint broken

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Footplate perforation made

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Fenestration with burr

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Posterior crus fractured

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Teflon piston

• Length of piston =

medial surface of

incus to stapes

footplate + 0.25 mm

• Range = 3.75 – 4.25

mm

1

cm

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Piston placed in perforation

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Stapedius tendon cut

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Stapedius tendon cut

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Piston crimped around incus

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Anterior crus fractured

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Stapes superstructure removed

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Footplate perforation sealed

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Tympanomeatal flap put back

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Laser Stapedotomy

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Stapedius vaporization

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Footplate fenestration

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Rossette formation

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Stapedotomy Piston

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Stapedectomy

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Footplate Fenestration

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Stapes superstructure removed

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Footplate removal

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Prosthesis placed over vein graft

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Complications of stapes surgery

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Intra-operative Post-operative

Floating footplate Otitis media

Submerged footplate Oval window granuloma

Dislocated incus Perilymph fistula

Perforated TM Sensori-neural HL

Damage to facial nerve Persistent air-bone gap

or chorda tympani Vestibular dysfunction

Persistent stapedial artery Delayed facial palsy in

Perilymph flooding laser surgery

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Sodium Fluoride• Given in cochlear otosclerosis & active focus

of otospongiosis (Schwartze sign).

• Acts by:

a. Decreases bone resorption

b. Increases bone formation

c. Prevents enzymatic damage to cochlea

• 20 mg orally, thrice daily for 3 - 6 months

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Hearing Aid

For patients who:

• Are unfit for surgery

• Refuse surgery

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Thank You