“…Almost all children with Apert syndrome suffer from otitis media with effusion, a well-known cause of conductive hearing loss [23]. Other contributing factors to the CHL in Apert syndrome include middle ear pathologies, such as atelectasis and adhesions of the tympanic membrane, and ossicular fixation and erosion, just to name a few (Table 3) [18,19,21,24,25]. In one series, an adult with Apert syndrome and bilateral mixed hearing loss due to congenital fixation of the stapes had a marked improvement in her hearing with stapes mobilization, while a child with bilateral conductive hearing loss due to jugular bulb dehiscence, fixed incus and congenitally fixed stapes did not have much improvement in hearing following incus removal and homograft malleus insertion/ inner ear reconstruction [24].…”