Ossicle Chain Disarticulation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Reconstructive Ear Surgery in Pediatric Population. Cross Sectional Study
The aim of the study is 1. Evaluation of preoperative degree of hearing loss in pediatric population. 2. Evaluation of types and prevalence's of ossicular disruptions due to chronic otitis media and trauma. 3. Assessment of best candidates for hearing restoration surgeries. 4. Comparing different surgical techniques for hearing restoration in various ossicular disorders . 5. Evaluation of degree of surgical restoration of the sound transmitting mechanism of the middle ear in pediatric population.
Conductive hearing loss (CHL) results from impaired transmission of sound from the external auditory canal across the middle ear structures to the cochlea of the inner ear. A variety of disorders can affect the sound transmission pathway at the level of the ear canal, tympanic membrane, and ossicles prior to reaching the hearing organ. Ossiculoplasty is the surgical restoration of the sound transmitting mechanism of the middle ear. Ossiculoplasty has been performed as early as the 1950s.A myriad of prosthetics and surgical techniques have been described over the last half-century, with no overall consensus on the ideal method of treatment. Pediatric population are commonly known to develop conductive hearing loss secondary to various conditions such as chronic otitis media, otitis media with effusion, atelectatic otitis media and head trauma. Various methods have been fashioned to restore hearing in such patients however no consensus to the most optimum method for hearing restoration has been well established ;