Classify aural atresia. Discuss its evaluation and treatment 2013
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Question – Classify congenital aural atresia. Discuss in brief its evaluation and treatment options. (4+3+3) December 2013
Aural Atresia
- Aural Atresia:
- 90% nonsyndromic.
- 10% syndromic.
- 20–30% bilateral
- When it occurs alone, it is due to failure of canalisation of the ectodermal core that fills the dorsal part of first branchial cleft.
- The outer meatus, in these cases, is obliterated with fibrous tissue or bone while the deep meatus and the tympanic membrane are normal.
- Associations:
- Microtia (55–93%)
- Malformed SCCs (10%).
- Malformed cochlea (5%).
- Cholesteatoma (4–7%).
- Stapes fixation (4%).
- Fusion of malleus/incus is most common middle ear anomaly.
- Footplate is usually normal.
- Otitis media should be treated aggressively to preserve hearing in the normal contralateral ear.
External Auditory Canal –
- -EAC derived from 1st branchial groove and initially represented by a solid core of epithelial cells that extends down to area of tympanic ring and first pharyngeal pouch
- -in middle trimester, absorption of epithelial cells begins, progressing in medial to lateral direction
- -malformation of tympanic bone produces atretic bone at level of tympanic membrane and results in atresia of ear canal
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