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C.S.O.M.: Clinical Features

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1 C.S.O.M.: Clinical Features
Dr. Vishal Sharma

2 Definition Chronic (> 3 months) pyogenic infection of middle ear cleft mucosa, characterized by persistent perforation of tympanic membrane, ear discharge & decreased hearing Prevalence in Nepal: 7.2 %

3 Types of C.S.O.M. Tubo-tympanic: chronic pyogenic infection of
middle ear cleft mucosa with persistent perforation in pars tensa Attico-antral: chronic pyogenic infection of middle ear cleft with cholesteatoma & granulations in attic or postero-superior quadrant of pars tensa

4 Middle ear cleft

5 Tubo-tympanic vs. Attico-antral

6 Tympanic Membrane Perforations

7 Types Perforation of Pars Tensa 1. Central  tubo-tympanic
 Small  Medium  Large  Subtotal 2. Central with ingrowing epithelium  attico-antral 3. Marginal  attico-antral 4. Total  attico-antral Perforation of Pars Flaccida 1. Attic  attico-antral

8 4 quadrants of T.M. umbo

9 Small perforation Involves only one quadrant or < 10% of pars tensa

10 Medium perforation Involves two quadrants or 10 – 40 % of pars tensa

11 Medium perforation

12 Large perforation Involves 3 or 4 quadrants with wide T.M. remnant or
> 40 % of pars tensa

13 Subtotal perforation Involves all 4 quadrants & reaches up to annulus
fibrosus

14 In growing epithelium T.M. perforation with inward migration of

15 Marginal perforation Erodes annulus fibrosus & one margin is formed by
bony tympanic

16 Marginal perforation

17 Total perforation Total erosion of pars tensa & anulus fibrosus

18 Attic perforation Involves pars flaccida

19 Tympanic Membrane Retractions

20 Grade 1 retraction Dull, lustreless T.M. Prominent annulus
Cone of light absent Handle medialized Prominent lateral process Malleolar folds sickle shaped

21 Grade 2 retraction Eardrum touches incus

22 Grade 3 retraction TM touches promontory (atelectasis) but mobile on
Valsalva maneuver or Siegalization

23 Grade 4 retraction TM firmly adherent to promontory & immobile on
Valsalva maneuver or Siegalization

24 PSQ retraction pocket

25 Attic retraction pocket

26 Otological examination
1. Pre-auricular region: sinus, lymph node 2. Pinna: size, position, deformity, swelling 3. Post-auricular region: surgical scar, swelling, fistula, lymph node 4. External auditory canal: meatal opening, otitis externa, wax, fungal debris, ear discharge

27 Otological examination
5. Tympanic membrane: intact: colour, position, mobility, tympanosclerosis, retraction pocket perforated: type, site, size & margin of perforation handle of malleus; middle ear cavity (mucosa, ear discharge, polyp, granulations, cholesteatoma flakes); pars flaccida

28 Otological examination
6. Mastoid cavity: size, facial ridge, discharge, epithelialization, granulations, polyps 7. Tragal tenderness: associated otitis externa 8. Mastoid tenderness: cymba conchae, mastoid body + tip & posterior zygoma root 9. Fistula sign Facial nerve function 11. Tuning Fork Tests

29 Tubo-tympanic Disease

30 Predisposing factors Upper respiratory tract infection (recurrent)
Upper respiratory tract allergy Pre-existing otitis media with effusion Cleft palate Immune deficiency: diabetes, AIDS Poor socio-economic status

31 Bacteria responsible Staphylococcus aureus Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Klebsiella Proteus Streptococcus Bacteroides

32 Routes of infection Via Eustachian tube: U.R.T.I., nose blowing, regurgitation of milk Via tympanic membrane perforation: following A.S.O.M. or post-traumatic Haematogenous (rare): viral exanthematous fevers

33 Pathological Changes 1. Eardrum: central perforation; myringosclerosis
2. Ossicles: Destruction (hyperaemic decalcification) Tympanoslerosis Fibrosis + Adhesions 3. Middle ear mucosa: edematous, pale pink 4. Mastoid bone: sclerosis

34 Clinical Features Ear discharge: profuse, mucoid / muco-purulent,
intermittent, odourless, not blood-stained Hearing Loss:  usually conductive (25-50 dB)  absent in small, dry perforations  round window shielding by ear discharge leads to better hearing Tympanic membrane: central perforation

35 Stages of Tubotympanic disease
Otorrhoea Eardrum perforation Last ear discharge Active Present - Quiescent Absent < 6 months Inactive > 6 months Healed

36 Attico-antral disease

37 Cholesteatoma Term used by Johannes Müller in 1858
Three dimensional sac lined by matrix of keratinizing stratified squamous epithelium which rests on a thin layer of fibrous tissue Contains desquamated keratin debris Grows at the expense of surrounding bone Not a tumor & has no cholesterol Epidermosis is a better term

38 Cholesteatoma

39 Histopathology

40 Causes of bone destruction
1. Hyperaemic decalcification 2. Osteoclastic bone resorption due to:  Acid phosphatase  Collagenase  Acid proteases  Proteolytic enzymes  Leukotrienes  Cytokines 3. Pressure necrosis: No role 4. Bacterial toxins: No role

41 Types of Cholesteatoma
Congenital (McKenzie) Primary Acquired Secondary Acquired 1. Retraction pocket Squamous metaplasia (Wittmaack) 2. Epithelial migration 2. Basal cell hyperplasia (Habermann) (Ruedi) Tertiary Acquired 3. Squamous metaplasia 1. Post-traumatic (Sade) 2. Post-tympanoplasty

42 Congenital cholesteatoma
Persistence of congenital cell rests in middle ear, petrous apex, cerebello-pontine angle

43 Congenital cholesteatoma

44 Retraction pocket formation
Retraction pocket in pars flaccida or Postero-superior quadrant pars tensa due to E.T. dysfunction

45 Basal cell hyperplasia
Hyperplasia of basal cells in epithelial layer of T.M. & their invasion of sub-epithelial tissues

46 Primary squamous metaplasia
Transformation of middle ear mucosa into squamous epithelium due to infection, with no T.M. perforation

47 Secondary squamous metaplasia
Transformation of middle ear mucosa into squamous epithelium due to infection via T.M. perforation

48 Epithelial migration Migration of epithelium via T.M. perforation into middle ear

49 Post-traumatic cholesteatoma
Mechanisms: 1. Epithelial entrapment in fracture line 2. In growth of epithelium through fracture line 3. Traumatic implantation of epithelium into middle ear 4. Trapping of epithelium medial to E.A.C. stenosis

50 Pathological Changes 1. T.M. perforation: marginal or attic
2. T.M. retraction pocket: attic or P.S.Q. 3. Cholesteatoma formation 4. Ossicles: destruction 5. Middle ear mucosa: edematous, red 6. Aural polyp: red, fleshy 7. Osteitis & granulation tissue formation 8. Mastoid bone: erosion, sclerosis

51 Clinical Features Ear discharge: scanty, purulent, continuous, foul-
smelling, blood-stained Hearing Loss: conductive or sensori-neural T.M. perforation: marginal or attic or total T.M. retraction pocket: attic or P.S.Q. Cholesteatoma flakes Aural polyp, osteitis & granulation tissue

52 Features of Complications
Severe otalgia, painful swelling around ear Vertigo, nausea, vomiting Headache + blurred vision + projectile vomiting Fever + neck rigidity + irritability / drowsiness Facial asymmetry Gradenigo syndrome (apex petrositis) Ataxia

53 Otorrhoea & aural polyp

54 Attic cholesteatoma

55 Attic cholesteatoma

56 PSQ cholesteatoma & granulation tissue

57 Attico-antral Tubo-tympanic Otorrhoea: Scanty Profuse Continuous
Intermittent Purulent Mucoid Blood-stained No Foul smelling Attic / marginal perforation, retraction pocket Central perforation Cholesteatoma, granulation

58 Tuberculous Otitis Media
Painless, odorless otorrhoea refractory to antibiotics Multiple TM perforations  large perforation Middle ear mucosa pale (congestion around E.T.O.) Pale granulations in mastoid & middle ear Severe deafness with bony necrosis (caries) Facial palsy & labyrinthitis Tx: Anti-TB therapy + cortical mastoidectomy

59 Multiple T.M. perforations

60 Thank You


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