Chronic inflammation of the middle ear is the most frequent cause of otogenic complications. Meningitis is the most frequent otogenic intracranial complication, followed by otogenic brain abscesses, while other complications are significantly less frequent. The study is aimed at presenting clinical causitry of otogenic brain abscesses consequential to chronic suppurative otitis in order to evaluate modern diagnostic and therapeutic possibilities. The study was retrospective and included the patients treated at the Institute of Otorhinolaryngology and Maxillofacial Surgery of the Clinical Centre of Serbia diagnosed with otogenic brain abscess during a five-year period (1996-2000). A total of 9 patients (male to female ratio 8:1), aged 16-68 years, were assessed. The following parameters were analyzed: sex, age groups, place of living, occupation, number of hospitalizations, diagnostic procedures, symptoms and clinical signs of otogenic complications, other otogenic complications associated with brain abscess, endocranial localization of otogenic abscess, therapeutic procedures (oto-surgical treatment) and intraoperative otological findings. In our group of patients, otogenic brain abscesses were significantly more frequent in male patients in their forties, with median age of 33.5 years. As for the place of living, the patients from the provinces were more frequent, while with respect to their level of education, those with elementary or high school degrees were predominant. The inflammatory process most frequently spread into the endocranium through direct destruction of the bone walls of the middle ear. Diagnostic procedures included history, clinical otorhinolaryngological examination, audiological and vestibulological assessment, neurological ophthalmologic and radiographic examinations (CT, MRI). CT is the most reliable diagnostic tool enabling localization of the change, timing of surgical treatment and monitoring of surgical success. Presence of other otogenic complications associated with brain abscess was evidenced in six of our patients. Cerebral localization of abscess was more frequent (7). Four patients underwent previous oto-surgical treatment. The treatment included primary neurosurgical approach (radical extirpation or abscess drainage), followed by radical oto-surgical treatment after improvement of the patient's general condition.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
Otolaryngol Pol
January 2025
Department of Pediatric Otolaryngology, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland.
<b>Introduction:</b> Central venous thrombosis (CVT) represents a well-documented complication of acute otitis media (AOM) and acute mastoiditis (AM). Despite widespread antibiotic utilization, which has significantly reduced the incidence of severe AOM/AM complications, recent years have witnessed an increasing frequency of thrombotic complications in pediatric patients, not invariably presenting with classical neurological manifestations.<b>Aim:</b> This study aimed to investigate the potential correlation between COVID-19 infection and increased CVT incidence, while sharing therapeutic experiences, given the absence of standardized treatment protocols for otogenic CVT in pediatric populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Otol
July 2024
Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Department, King Abdullah Medical City, Makkah, Saudi Arabia.
Objective: To report a rare case of otogenic tension pneumocephalus as a complication of a diffuse leptomeningeal glioneuronal tumor in a patient with a ventriculoperitoneal (V. P.) shunt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurol Surg A Cent Eur Neurosurg
November 2024
Neurosurgery, Universitätsmedizin Rostock, Rostock, Germany.
Background: COVID-19 has attracted global attention primarily because of the severe acute respiratory symptoms associated with it. However, nearly one third of the patients also present with neurologic symptoms. This report describes a case of a previously healthy woman with acute COVID-19 infection, who developed acute facial nerve palsy and rapid progression to coma due to otogenic brain abscess.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurg Neurol Int
October 2024
Department of Neurological Surgery, Childrens Hospital of Orange County, Orange, California, United States.
Background: Otitis media (OM) can uncommonly lead to intracranial complications. Epidural abscesses represent a large proportion of cases; however, literature regarding the optimal surgical management of otogenic epidural abscesses is sparse. Favorably located epidural abscesses may be amenable to drainage through a transmastoid approach because the tegmen mastoideum lies immediately inferior to the middle cranial fossa (MCF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!