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The chronic ear: A case report of bilateral cholesteatoma in a 10-year-old boy

Authors :
James Ramsden
Mate Naszai
Source :
Journal of the Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences. 2
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, 2021.

Abstract

Cholesteatoma is a rare condition affecting 9-12.6 adults and 3-15 children per 100,000 per annum [1–4], with a more aggressive presentation in the paediatric population [5]. Intermittent otorrhea (ear discharge) is the presenting complaint in over half of cholesteatoma patients [6, 7]. The peak incidence of cholesteatoma is 5-15 years of age [8] which overlaps significantly with a period of high incidence in otitis media [9] and externa [10], diseases that often present the same way as cholesteatoma. This results in diagnosis that may take several years. Left untreated, cholesteatoma can cause significant lasting damage in the form of deafness, vertigo, facial paralysis, meningitis, and brain abscesses which may prove fatal [11]. Current treatment options are limited to surgical excision with the aim to establish a safe and manageable ear, while maintaining hearing is secondary. Improving surgical instrumentation has allowed a better success rate, however, revision surgeries remain a mainstay of practice. In practical terms, this means that those affected by bilateral disease often undergo surgery 4 or more times [12]. This represents a significant burden for patients. The decision about the exact surgical approach (canal wall up vs canal wall down) is a careful balancing act of safety versus functionality, and the pros and cons must be weighed in light of available evidence and the skill of the surgeon [13].

Details

ISSN :
26340267
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8d45d18cfae0a86d2b7172fef5eb3dfc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.37707/jnds.v2i3.152