Background: Decades of clinical observation have led our subspecialty team to suspect that negative nasopharyngeal pressure is associated with attic retraction pocket formation. Furthermore, LaPlace's law, which states that the pressure within a sphere varies with the inverse of the radius, provides the dynamic explanation for why the attic area of the tympanic membrane tends to retract more frequently than the pars tensa.
Methods: The attic retraction pockets of 154 patients were classified into grades of severity (grades I-V).
Introduction: Although attic retractions have previously been classified into Grades 0 through IV, it is often not possible to assign attic retraction pockets into a single specific category. The present study describes an improved classification system based on otoscopic and endoscopic visualization of the retraction pocket fundus, the ossicular status in the attic, degree of scutal erosion, and the presence or absence of cholesteatoma.
Materials And Methods: One hundred and fifty-four patients (200 ears) with different grades of attic retraction pockets who were seen by a tertiary referral otology center between August 2015 and July 2018 were selected for this study.
Otology deals with hearing and balance and is an important aspect of the special senses of the human system. We are proud to be Otologists since we can restore the hearing of millions of people who have hard of hearing. In the past for several centuries, till the 1960s and 70s, Otology's development was like a flat curve.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
March 2012
The study purpose was to determine the efficacy of steroids, volume expanders and antivirals in the management of idiopathic sudden sensory neural hearing loss and to establish importance of early medical intervention. In this prospective study, thirty-four patients presenting with idiopathic sudden hearing loss of 30 db or more were enrolled in study group between 2005 and 2009. Patient variables as they related to recovery were studied and include patient age, time to onset of therapy, status of contralateral ear, presence of diabetes, severity of hearing loss, pattern of hearing loss in audiogram and presence of associated symptoms, (tinnitus, vertigo).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
July 2011
The objective is to evaluate change in post-operative bone conduction in patients who underwent surgery for conductive/mixed hearing loss due to various reasons. The study design is of retrospective case review and tertiary referral center setting. Five-hundred patients with unilateral conductive/mixed hearing loss were divided into five equal groups (each representing different causes for pre-operative hearing loss), who underwent appropriate surgical correction and had a follow-up audiogram available.
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