We studied the efficacy of tonsillectomy, or tonsillectomy with adenoidectomy, in 187 children severely affected with recurrent throat infection. Ninety-one of the children were assigned randomly to either surgical or nonsurgical treatment groups, and 96 were assigned according to parental preference. In both the randomized and nonrandomized trials, the effects of tonsillectomy and of tonsillectomy with adenoidectomy were similar. By various measures, the incidence of throat infection during the first two years of follow-up was significantly lower (P less than or equal to 0.05) in the surgical groups than in the corresponding nonsurgical groups. Third-year differences, although in most cases not significant, also consistently favored the surgical groups. On the other hand, in each follow-up year many subjects in the nonsurgical groups had fewer than three episodes of infection, and most episodes among subjects in the nonsurgical groups were mild. Of the 95 subjects treated with surgery, 13 (14 per cent) had surgery-related complications, all of which were readily managed or self-limited. These results warrant the election of tonsillectomy for children meeting the trials' stringent eligibility criteria, but also provide support for nonsurgical management. Treatment for such children must therefore be individualized.
In an attempt to distinguish normal from abnormal eustachian tube function, two groups of adults with nonintact tympanic membranes were tested. Six subjects had traumatic perforations of the tympanic membrane and a negative otologic histroy while five subjects had perforations as a sequela of otitis media. The subjects were tested with two methods: the middle ear inflation-deflation technique and a newly introduced forced-response technique. The comparison of the two groups revealed marked differences between normal subjects and patients with middle ear disease in active tubal dilation mechanisms and biomechanics of the eustachian tube. The forced-response test appeared to be a better method to determine the degree of actual tubal function.
Middle ear pressures were assessed by tympanometry in a group of 56 children with concurrent or recent middle ear effusions, prior to myringotomy and tympanostomy tube insertion. Following myringotomy, the ventilatory function of the Eustachian tube was studied. Of the 104 ears tested, 76 (73%) had measured premyringotomy middle ear pressure between −100 and −400 mm H2O, or indeterminate middle ear pressure. Following myringotomy, most of the Eustachian tubes of children with prior otitis appeared to be more “floppy,” when compared with tubes of patients with traumatic perforations and an otherwise negative otologic history. Certain hypotheses have been presented regarding the mechanics of the system constituted by the nasal cavity, nasopharynx, Eustachian tube, middle ear and mastoid air cells as they influence susceptibility to, and persistence of, middle ear effusions.
A prospective study was carried out which tested three hypotheses: 1) certain tumors of the head and neck that originate in sites other than the nasopharynx may cause middle ear effusion; 2) middle ear effusion is a predictable sequela of radical maxillectomy as well as total or partial resection of the soft palate; and 3) middle ear effusions that follow surgery to remove head and neck lesions are due to disturbances in palatal function, specifically to tensor veli palatini muscle dysfunction. Our results indicate that one fourth of all subjects had some evidence of middle ear abnormality prior to entering into treatment although they were asymptomatic. The treatment process influenced the function of the middle ear, as 79% of the subjects experienced middle ear-eustachian tube dysfunction following treatment, and 23% were found to have developed a perforation of the tympanic membrane or required myringotomy and tube insertion to relieve middle ear effusion. The results of these studies indicate that surgery that is adequate to remove cancer of the maxilla, tonsil, or palate in most cases interferes with the function of the tensor veli palatini muscle, resulting in functional eustachian tube obstruction. The need for attention to and the treatment of middle ear effusion in such patients is emphasized in light of other sensory deficits in this patient population.
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