Degree of Hearing Improvement and Reduction of Air-Bone Gap After Tympanoplasty in a Tertiary Hospital in Saudi Arabia
Mohammed Al Hamoud, Atheer Alzubaidi, Khalid Al Shahrani, Ghaida Alotaibi, Faisal A Alkenani, Yahia Alahmari, Talat E Ardi, Mohammad Al-Ahmari, Mohammed Asiri

TL;DR
This study examines how tympanoplasty improves hearing and reduces the air-bone gap in patients with chronic otitis media in Saudi Arabia.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence on the predictive value of preoperative air-bone gap for ossicular chain status in tympanoplasty planning.
Findings
Tympanoplasty significantly reduced the air-bone gap by an average of 3.7 dB post-surgery.
Preoperative air-bone gap is a reliable predictor of ossicular chain status during surgery.
The type of tympanic membrane perforation does not reliably indicate ossicular chain status.
Abstract
Background: A clinical condition known as chronic otitis media (COM) is characterized by tympanic membrane perforation, varying degrees of hearing loss, and otorrhea that lasts for two to six weeks. COM alone or with cholesteatoma may result in ossicular chain discontinuity and ossicular erosion. The hearing restoration procedure includes repairing the eardrum and building the ossicular chain in ears with damaged ossicles. Multiple studies suggest the predictive value of preoperative air-bone gap (ABG) to detect the ossicular chain status can help with proper preoperative planning for surgery. Objective: To determine the degree of hearing improvement and reduction in ABG after tympanoplasty and to investigate the correlation between preoperative ABG and the status of the ossicular chain during surgery. Study design, setting, and date: This retrospective hospital file-based study was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEar Surgery and Otitis Media · Nasal Surgery and Airway Studies · Sinusitis and nasal conditions
