Prosthesis migration and subsequent fixation caused the majority of stapedectomy failures. Collagen contracture of the oval window neomembrane lifts the prosthesis out of the oval window fenestration. Prosthesis displacement then results from adhesions pulling the prosthesis or mechanical forces further tilting the prosthesis. Incus erosion results from vibration against the fixed prosthesis. Six specific stapedotomy recommendations are made to minimize postoperative prosthesis migration.
During the past decade, the evolution of surgical techniques and philosophy for revision surgery after stapedectomy has accelerated. Lasers, new surgical techniques, and new prostheses now permit the precise identification and reliable correction of the conductive problem, while reducing the risk of postoperative sensorineural hearing loss that plagued nonlaser revision techniques.
Laboratory stapedotomy and stapedectomy revisions were performed in human temporal bones while pyroelectric wave energy analyzers and ultrasensitive thermocouples measured energy absorption at the stapes footplate and in the vestibule. Analysis of these data shows that the visible lasers (argon and KTP-532) possess ideal optical properties and precision for otosclerosis surgery but conversely have less than ideal tissue characteristics. The CO2 laser possesses ideal tissue characteristics. Recent advances in optical engineering and pulsing the energy have increased the precision of this laser to now provide the accuracy required for delicate microsurgery. Two clinical studies analyze the long-term hearing results and complications in patients who had undergone CO2 laser stapedectomy revision (59 patients) and CO2 laser stapedotomy (153 patients). The advantages that these laser techniques provide over conventional surgery methods are discussed.
This clinicopathologic study was undertaken to determine the meaning of surgical margins "involved" with carcinoma. The fate of hemilaryngectomy patients whose specimens had this finding was comparared with that of patients who had "uninvolved" margins. A consecutive series of 111 hemilaryngectomies performed for previously untreated invasive epidermoid carcinoma was analyzed. Serial step sections in a longitudinal plane were available for re-examination and re-evaluation of the surgical margins in each case. Clinical follow-up on every patient was current through 1972. Thirty-nine patients had cancer involvement of a margin in the hemilaryngectomy specimen. None of these patients received any immediate therapy but were followed only. Seven of these patients (18 percent) subsequently developed a biopsy proven local recurrence. Four of the 72 patients (6 percent) with uninvolved margins developed a local recurrence. The site of the positive margin in the specimen was compared with the clinical site of recurrence. The seven local recurrences in patients with positive margins were treated with full course irradiation or total laryngectomy. All of these patients are alive and free of cancer or have died of other causes without evidence of cancer. Of the four local recurrences in patients with negative margins one died of cancer; two are living and well, and one died of other causes. This study provides evidence to support the conservative management of those hemilaryngectomy patients who have involved margins in the resection specimen. No immediate treatment is required. Careful follow-up is indicated with 18 percent chance of clinical recurrence. These biopsy proven recurrences can then be successfully treated with total laryngectomy or full course irradiation. Utilizing this approach none of the 39 patients with involved margins died of cancer in the 5 to 12-year follow-up period.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.