Temporal Bone Fractures on High-Resolution CT: Bridging Radiologic Detail with Otologic Anatomy and Surgical Implications
Osama M. K. Edris, Abdulgaffar Bashir Adam, Emad Ali Albadawi, Ahmad Mahroos ALGhabban, Razan Saad M. Alqarni, Wejdan Hussain Owaydhah, Omar A. Alharthi, Eyad Khattab, Fahd Alharbi, Yasir Hassan Elhassan

TL;DR
This study examines how high-resolution CT scans can help understand and treat injuries to the temporal bone in Sudanese patients with head trauma.
Contribution
The study provides a detailed characterization of temporal bone fracture patterns and their clinical implications in a Sudanese population.
Findings
Longitudinal fractures were most common, but 27% breached the otic capsule.
Transverse/mixed fractures were strongly linked to complex mid-facial injuries.
Facial nerve palsy occurred in 58% of patients, with high inter-observer agreement on imaging assessments.
Abstract
Primary Objective: To characterize high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) fracture patterns, namely orientation and otic capsule status, among Sudanese patients with acute temporal bone trauma. Secondary Objectives: (i) To quantify the prevalence and pattern of concomitant craniofacial fractures, (ii) to describe early audiologic outcomes, and (iii) to document facial nerve dysfunction. Methods: Prospective cross-sectional study of 45 consecutive patients (≥5 years) with HRCT-confirmed TBF sustained within 7 days of injury, managed at two tertiary otolaryngology centers in Khartoum (October 2022–March 2023). All imaging, clinical, and audiologic variables were recorded once at the index presentation (≤7 days after trauma); the study did not include longitudinal follow-up. Two blinded experts independently classified fracture orientation (longitudinal, transverse, mixed/oblique),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFacial Nerve Paralysis Treatment and Research · Ear Surgery and Otitis Media · Facial Trauma and Fracture Management
