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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease cholesteatoma
Phenotype C0029882|otitis media
Sentences 50
PubMedID- 20873097 The aim of this study: was to assess the expression and distribution of the key regulators of bone destruction: osteoprotegerin (opg), receptor activator for nuclear factor kappa b ligand (rankl) and tumour necrosis factor alpha (tnf-alpha) in chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma and their role in the pathomechanism of bone resorption.
PubMedID- 24936778 Objective: to understand the third mobile window effect of chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma with inner ear fistula on the bone conduction threshold, we examined changes in the bone conduction audiogram after tympanoplasty with mastoidectomy for chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma with canal fistula.
PubMedID- 22737530 [5] the higher incidence of facial nerve dehiscence in fistula cases in our study is probably due to the fact that in iran, more cases of unsafe chronic suppurrative otitis media with more extensive cholesteatoma are seen and also most of our patients presented very late due to poor socioeconomic conditions.
PubMedID- 24348817 The symptoms of middle ear squamous papilloma resemble other neoplasms involving the middle ear, including chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma or granulation tissue.
PubMedID- 20495738 To evaluate the risk of the facial nerve injury during operations for chronic otitis media with or without cholesteatoma, stapedectomy in otosclerosis, exploratory tympanotomy, tympanoplasty, canaloplasty, osteomas surgery or other otologic surgery that involve facial nerve area.
PubMedID- 26171780 Moreover, we observed a 6.24-fold increased risk of developing acquired cholesteatoma in patients with osteoporosis and otitis media.
PubMedID- 22518159 Patients who have been operated for otological reasons other than chronic otitis media with or without cholesteatoma in last 4 years were included for the study.
PubMedID- 23853399 Acquired herniations are most commonly due to chronic otitis media with or without cholesteatoma and, in these cases, may be clinically silent beneath signs and symptoms of chronic middle ear disease, such as hearing loss, chronic otorrhoea, tinnitus and vertigo 4. bony defects, due to chronic ear surgery or other causes, can result in complications including csf otorrhoea, pulsatile middle ear or external auditory canal mass, seizures, meningitis, brain abscess, epidural abscess and death 11. other causes of acquired brain tissue herniation include trauma, neoplasia, irradiation or inflammatory conditions 12. symptoms of spontaneous brain herniation are generally mild, as serous otitis media, aural fullness, hearing loss and cerebrospinal fluid otorrhoea, although life-threatening complications such as meningitis, brain abscess and temporal lobe seizures are occasionally sentinel events 1314. in our series, presenting symptoms were mostly related to the presence of brain herniation; excluding 7 patients, who complained only of symptoms of chronic otitis media, the others (79%) complained of symptoms or presented signs related to the presence of the meh such as meningitis, headache, neurologic deficit and a mass in the middle ear.
PubMedID- 21124219 Recent findings: canal dehiscence involving the superior, lateral, and posterior semicircular canal can have different etiologies, including developmental abnormality, congenital defect, chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma, and high-riding jugular bulb.
PubMedID- 23788869 N-acetyl-β-d hexosaminidase (hex), in larynx cancer and chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma [19–21].
PubMedID- 20620613 In this evidence-based case report, we address the following clinical question: what is the predictive value of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (dw mri) for detecting a residual cholesteatoma in patients with chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma who have previously undergone a canal-wall-up procedure.
PubMedID- 24000326 The procedure was not performed on patients requiring mastoidectomy for chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma or in patients with draining ears during a period of 3 months prior to the operation.
PubMedID- 25992087 Chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma is the most frequent etiology of intratemporal complications.
PubMedID- 26045906 Objectives: to underline the effect of oxidative stress in chronic otitis media with and without cholesteatoma and to compare the oxidative stress values in the serum and tissue specimens in these two forms.
PubMedID- 23120707 A study of surgical management of chronic suppurative otitis media with cholesteatoma and its outcome.
PubMedID- 20545110 In 2 patients of iatrogenic trauma of the facial nerve, the primary disease was chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma, the lesions were localized at the mastoid segment and the second genu respectively.
PubMedID- 25193550 Fifty-two consecutive patients who underwent ossiculoplasty due to chronic otitis media with or without cholesteatoma were enrolled.
PubMedID- 20681268 She was diagnosed as having otitis media with cholesteatoma last year, and underwent mastoidectomy and tympanoplasty on the left side three months ago.
PubMedID- 24466073 Chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma was not excluded from the com definition, although no study involving that type was eligible for our meta-analysis.
PubMedID- 26330915 Facial nerve paralysis was frequently observed in cholesteatoma patients and in patients with chronic suppurative otitis media without cholesteatoma [6891011].
PubMedID- 25991999 Chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma differs from that without in that anaerobes, especially bacteroides and peptococcus, are the most common isolates; otherwise, the bacteriological profile is similar28.
PubMedID- 23370571 Results: abg improved after surgery for chronic otitis media without and with cholesteatoma, otosclerosis, trauma cases, or complication after acute otitis media/externa (p < 0.0001; p < 0.0001; p < 0.0001; p = 0.005; p = 0.004; respectively).
PubMedID- 23566902 The endoscope allows for better inspection for cholesteatoma in cases with chronic otitis media, better access to selective epitympanic poor ventilation and secondary selective chronic otitis media, better visualization of anterior poor ventilation of the mesotympanum (reestablishing adequate ventilation to the mesotympanum), better visualization and reconstruction of anterior tympanic membrane perforations, allows use of sheehy's lateral graft tympanoplasty through a transcanal approach, and increases the odds of preoperative detection of ossicular chain disruption associated with perforations.
PubMedID- 24303397 A total of 166 patients suffering from chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma that was resistant to treatment with systemic and local antibiotics were operated on during a 6-year period (2003–2009).
PubMedID- 24136312 Objective: to determine if radiologic chronic otitis media (com), both with and without cholesteatoma, is associated with superior semicircular canal dehiscence (sscd).
PubMedID- 25745608 Materials and methods: in a prospective longitudinal study with a mean follow-up of 28 months conducted between 2008-2012, a series of 56 ears in 48 patients with chronic otitis media due to a cholesteatoma underwent canal wall down mastoidectomy that their mastoid cavity obliterated with combined bone pate and palva flap.
PubMedID- 22488215 Material and method: a retrospective clinical study of 56 consecutive patients undergoing procedures for active chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma has been carried out.
PubMedID- 20815802 The management of chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma is surgery.
PubMedID- 23120677 Objective: the aim of this study was to determine the effect of myeloperoxydase (mpo) in bone destruction in patients of chronic otitis media (com) with cholesteatoma by immtino-histochemical staining and to conclude the possible relationship between bone destruction in patients with cholesteatoma accompanied with com and mpo activity.
PubMedID- 24778805 The remaining three patients included one case of cholesteatoma, one with otitis media, and one with a solid mass of the mastoid, which was proven to be a manifestation of acute lymphatic leukemia by mastoid biopsy.fig.
PubMedID- 24294552 Potential etiologies noted for canal dehiscence include possible developmental abnormalities, congenital defects, chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma, fibrous dysplasia, and high-riding jugular bulb.
PubMedID- 22319694 Chronic suppurative otitis media with cholesteatoma is a common problem.
PubMedID- 24781657 The association between air-bone gain and age, ossiculoplasty material (autologous or titanium), preoperative diagnosis (chronic otitis media without cholesteatoma, cholesteatoma, or conductive hearing loss with intact tympanic membrane), and type of surgery (tympanoplasty, canal wall-down mastoidectomy, or canal wall-up mastoidectomy) was explored using regression analysis.
PubMedID- 22801042 In chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma (42 ears/33 patients), we noted preoperative severe complications including labyrinthine fistula (7/97 = 7.22%), widely exposed dura (1/97 = 1.03%), and facial palsy 1 (1/97 =1.03%).
PubMedID- 25752120 [temporal bone ct digital on chronic suppurative otitis media with cholesteatoma navigation assessment].
PubMedID- 24427579 This is a prospective study in which 60 cases of unsafe chronic suppurative otitis media with cholesteatoma were included.
PubMedID- 23194317 Exploratory tympanotomy was often indicated for the management of ssnhl occurring in the context of head trauma, barotrauma and chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma and in patients with congenital inner-ear abnormalities [17,18].
PubMedID- 23832258 Ten patients who have chronic otitis media with primary acquired cholesteatoma were included in this study.
PubMedID- 23656971 The cascade of molecular events applicable to atelectasis and cholesteatoma that coexist with chronic otitis media and bone erosion as sequelae is summarised.
PubMedID- 22070083 Method: seventy-three patients (76 ears) suffering from chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma were treated with canal wall down mastoidectomy with tympanoplasty.
PubMedID- 25257277 Methods: 360 patients (370 ears) who received canal wall down tympanomastoidectomy due to otitis media(145 ears without cholesteatoma and 225 ears with cholesteatoma) were analyzed retrospectively, in which the incidence and locations of fnd was studied, and the relevance for fnd, clinical features (age, disease duration, preoperative facial paralysis) and intraoperative findings (state of fnd and lateral semicircular canal fistula), were analyzed.
PubMedID- 22770255 Patients and methods: between january 2003 and october 2009, 166 patients who underwent open cavity tympanomastoidectomy due to chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma in our clinic were retrospectively analyzed.
PubMedID- 22583684 Materials and methods: fifty-eight chronic otitis media patients with suspected cholesteatoma were thus evaluated two weeks pre-operatively, and divided into group one (41 patients, no previous surgery, suspected primary acquired cholesteatoma) and group two (17 patients, previous surgery, scheduled 'second-look' or revision surgery for suspected residual or recurrent cholesteatoma).
PubMedID- 25398825 Out of these 50 consecutive patients, 29 had recurrent chronic otitis media (com) with or without cholesteatoma and 21 patients had old open cavities.
PubMedID- 19816225 Seventeen patients (44%) experienced chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma, whereas 22 (56%) of them had a diagnosis of chronic otitis media without cholesteatoma.
PubMedID- 20875194 The rate of chronic suppurative otitis media with cholesteatoma, expressed as a proportion of the rate of all chronic suppurative otitis media subtypes, was 17.8 per cent in tibeto-mongolian patients and 18.6 per cent in indo-caucasian patients (p > 0.05).
PubMedID- 24148865 Methods: this was a retrospective study of 15 years (from 01 january 1995 to 31 december 2009) for patients aged 0-15 years admitted in ent ward of fann hospital for chronic otitis media complicated with cholesteatoma the parameters studied were epidemiology, clinical presentation, disease progression and management.
PubMedID- 19398179 Objectives: to analyze the characteristics and outcomes of revision surgery for chronic otitis media (com) with or without cholesteatoma, and to compare with those of primary surgery.
PubMedID- 24491375 Importance: it is important that chronic otitis media with cholesteatoma be treated successfully in patients to protect them from having repeated surgeries with related surgical co-morbidities and hearing loss.
PubMedID- 26375974 Patients: there were 63 canal-wall-down mastoidectomies for chronic otitis media with or without cholesteatoma between 2007 and 2014 with follow-up of at least 6 months.

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