Role of mastoid pneumatization in predicting tympanoplasty results: Will it have the same importance in different age groups?

Am J Otolaryngol. 2023 Jan-Feb;44(1):103680. doi: 10.1016/j.amjoto.2022.103680. Epub 2022 Oct 20.

Abstract

Introduction: There are several factors that seem to affect the surgical success rate of tympanoplasty, one of them being the pneumatization of the contralateral mastoid. In the current literature, several studies have been published with classification proposals for temporal bone pneumatization pattern. This study aims to evaluate the role of mastoid air cell extension in relation to the sigmoid sinus in predicting the surgical success of tympanoplasty.

Material and methods: This case-control study was performed on patients diagnosed with chronic otitis media (COM) who underwent type I tympanoplasty. The study group did not close the tympanic membrane, or there was a retraction or lateralization of the graft. The control group consisted of patients with surgical success.

Results: No statistically significant difference was found between groups regrading age, gender, perforation side/type, previous nasal surgery, and the presence of chronic otitis media in contralateral ear. A statistically significant difference was found when groups were compared in relation to the degree of pneumatization of the contralateral ear (p = 0.046), and this relationship does not seem to be influenced by age.

Conclusion: To predict surgical success in terms of tympanic membrane closure in tympanoplasty, classification of contralateral ear pneumatization degree using the sigmoid sinus as a reference seems to be a valid and easy to apply method, and makes it possible to restrict the evaluation of pneumatization to the mastoid, a cell complex that does not seem to change with age.

Keywords: Mastoid; Otitis media; Tympanic membrane perforation; Tympanoplasty.

MeSH terms

  • Case-Control Studies
  • Chronic Disease
  • Humans
  • Mastoid / diagnostic imaging
  • Mastoid / surgery
  • Otitis Media* / diagnostic imaging
  • Otitis Media* / surgery
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Tympanic Membrane / surgery
  • Tympanic Membrane Perforation* / surgery
  • Tympanoplasty / methods