Middle-ear surgery for chronic otitis media not only treats the ear but also improves gustatory function in the majority of patients. In patients with intra-operative injury to the chorda tympani nerve, post-operative taste decline is only temporary.
We determined temporal bone anatomy in patients with unilateral attic cholesteatoma. We compared the affected and normal ears of ten patients with unilateral attic cholesteatoma using three-dimensionally reconstructed high-resolution computed tomography images of the temporal bone. We determined the eustachian tube angle, eustachian tube length, sizes of the tympanic orifice of the eustachian tube, the pars flaccida, and the mastoid cavity, and distances of the pars flaccida and the tympanic orifice of the eustachian tube from the epitympanic roof. No significant differences were found between the normal and affected ears with regard to the size of the eustachian tube orifice, eustachian tube length or distances of the pars flaccida and the tympanic orifice of the eustachian tube from the epitympanic roof. By contrast, the mastoid cavity and the eustachian tube angle were significantly larger in the normal ears than in the affected ears [mean, 6.99 cm(3) (S.D.,4.9 cm(3)) vs. 1.28 cm(3) (0.81 cm(3)) and 16.7° (4.12°) vs. 13.89° (5.30°), respectively]. The pars flaccida was significantly smaller in the normal ears [1.07 cm (0.31 cm)] than in the affected ears [2.19 cm (0.77 cm)]. The inherent anatomy of the eustachian tube may be particularly important in the formation of attic cholesteatomas.
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