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      Hearing Results in 151 Primary Stapedotomies for Otosclerosis: The Effects of Using Different Audiologic Parameters and Criteria on Success Rates

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          Objective:

          To describe the 151 hearing results of primary stapedotomy for otosclerosis using different criteria of success rates.

          Design:

          Retrospective case series of 151 patients with a diagnosis of otosclerosis and operated on by the same surgeon with the same technique, using a CO 2 laser. Patients with revision surgery were excluded. The audiometric data were extracted from the patient files and divided into three groups: early postoperative follow-up (<1 mo after surgery), mid-term follow up (between 1 mo and 1 yr), and late postoperative follow-up (>1 yr).

          Results:

          The postoperative air-bone gap (ABG) was 10 dB or less in 45.2% in the mid-term follow up. For this same follow-up, ABG closure less or equal than 20 dB was achieved in 95.6% of cases. The lower percentage of patients with a postoperative ABG closure of less than or equal to 10 dB can be due to the high rate of bone conduction (BC) overclosure of 15.65%. The functional success described as an air conduction (AC) threshold less than or equal to 30 dB was achieved in 52.2% of patients. The mean speech reception threshold (SRT) in the mid-term follow up was 27.4 dB. The analysis of the data according to the Amsterdam Hearing Evaluation Plots (AHEPs) shows a success rate of 87% at early follow-up.

          Conclusions:

          The success rate is mainly dependent on the definition and criteria as a measure of success. An analysis of the evolution of the BC is mandatory to avoid a false positive success rate when the ABG closure is used. Therefore, the use of the AHEPs would acquire additional information. The hearing outcome has also been based on the speech audiometry and the number of patients achieving an AC less than or equal to 30 dB as a more realistic measure of success. Our series confirms good long term hearing results achieved in stapedotomy surgery with the CO 2 laser.

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          Most cited references22

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          Committee on Hearing and Equilibrium guidelines for the evaluation of results of treatment of conductive hearing loss. AmericanAcademy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Ffoundation, Inc.

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            Surgical findings and long-term hearing results in 3,050 stapedotomies for primary otosclerosis: a prospective study with the otology-neurotology database.

            To evaluate with a new otologic database the results of primary stapes surgery for otosclerosis with up to 14 years of follow-up in a consecutive series of 2,525 patients operated on by the same surgeon with the same technique (stapedotomy and vein graft interposition) and to provide online access to the complete data of this study for the reviewers. To study the effect of specific operative findings (obliterative otosclerosis and simultaneous malleus ankylosis) and age at the time of surgery on the long-term outcome. Prospective clinical study using a new computerized otologic database. : Tertiary referral center. Two thousand five hundred twenty-five patients who underwent 3,050 stapedotomies for otosclerotic stapes fixation were enrolled in this study from January 1991 to December 2004. Separate analyses were made for two unique pathologies (92 cases of obliterative otosclerosis and 19 cases of simultaneous malleus ankylosis) diagnosed during surgery and for patients in two age brackets ( or=65 yr [302 patients]). Stapedotomy with vein graft interposition and reconstruction with either a Teflon piston, a bucket handle prosthesis, or a total prosthesis. Preoperative and postoperative audiometric evaluation using conventional audiometry. Air-bone gap (ABG), bone-conduction thresholds, and air-conduction thresholds were all assessed. Postoperative audiometry was performed at 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months and then annually for 14 years. Overall, the postoperative ABG was closed to 10 dB in 94.2% of cases. The mean four-frequency postoperative ABG was 1.7 dB compared with 25.6 dB preoperatively. The mean four-frequency bone-conduction thresholds were unchanged postoperatively. A significant postoperative sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL; >15 dB) was seen in 0.5% of cases in this series. Postoperative ABG was achieved to within 10 dB in 95% of cases of obliterative otosclerosis and in 64.7% of cases of simultaneous malleus ankylosis. A significant postoperative SNHL (>15 dB) was seen in 4.8% of cases of obliterative otosclerosis and was not observed in any cases of simultaneous malleus ankylosis. Postoperative ABG was achieved to within 10 dB in 93.5% of cases in the pediatric series and in 94.5% of cases in the senior series. A significant postoperative SNHL (>15 dB) was seen in 0.7% of cases in the senior group but was not observed in the children. Using a new otologic database, our series confirms that stapedotomy with vein graft interposition for otosclerotic stapes fixation is a safe and successful treatment for long-term hearing improvement. The deterioration in hearing with time after stapedotomy did not exceed the rate of hearing loss because of presbyacusis. Therefore, argon laser stapedotomy with vein graft interposition is our preferred surgical technique in the treatment of otosclerosis. Obliterative otosclerosis and simultaneous malleus ankylosis may be encountered during stapedotomy. Our study shows that reasonable success rates can still be expected in these situations. Stapedotomy results in the elderly and in children are comparable to those obtained in patients of other groups of age undergoing surgery for otosclerosis without an increased risk for complications.
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              Efficacy of evaluation of audiometric results after stapes surgery in otosclerosis. II. A method for reporting results from individual cases.

              To standardize the reporting of hearing results after middle ear surgery, the Committee on Hearing and Equilibrium of the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery proposed 2 levels of guidelines: level 1 for reporting summary data and level 2 for reporting raw data. The Committee encourages the reporting of raw data from each individual case. However, in studies in which the examined population is too large, this can yield difficulties. With respect to this point, we designed a method for a simple visual presentation of hearing results in an attempt to provide data from each individually operated ear in a patient group. In this method the relation between the preoperative and postoperative bone-conduction levels is evaluated to assess overclosure and iatrogenic cochlear damage, and the relation between postoperative gain in air conduction and the preoperative air-bone gap is evaluated as a measure of technical success rate. This results in 2 plots, which we called the Amsterdam Hearing Evaluation Plots. Audiometric data from 451 stapes operations were used to demonstrate the use of the Amsterdam Hearing Evaluation Plots.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Otol Neurotol
                Otol Neurotol
                MAO
                Otology & Neurotology
                Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (Hagerstown, MD )
                1531-7129
                1537-4505
                December 2021
                27 September 2021
                : 42
                : 10
                : e1436-e1443
                Affiliations
                []Université Catholique de Louvain, ENT Department, Mont-Godinne University Hospital, Yvoir, Belgium
                []Audiology Department, Institut Libre Marie-Haps, Brussels
                []Statistical department, Université Catholique de Louvain, Mont-Godinne University Hospital, Yvoir, Belgium
                [§ ]Anatomy Department, Université de Namur, Namur, Belgium
                Author notes
                Address correspondence and reprint requests to Morgane Saerens, M.D., ENT department, Mont-Godinne Univesity Hospital, Rue Dr Gaston Therasse 1, 5530 Yvoir, Belgium; E-mail: saerensmorgane@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                ON-20-927 00008
                10.1097/MAO.0000000000003332
                8584219
                34766946
                b5105dc8-6fb0-482d-bd41-edf2cc7f650e
                Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of Otology & Neurotology, Inc.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND), where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal.

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                Categories
                Otosclerosis
                Custom metadata
                TRUE
                ONLINE-ONLY

                hearing results,otologic surgery,otosclerosis
                hearing results, otologic surgery, otosclerosis

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