Cholesteatoma
What
Is a Cholesteatoma?
A
cholesteatoma is a skin growth that occurs in an abnormal location,
the middle ear behind the eardrum. It is usually due to repeated
infection, which causes an ingrowth of the skin of the eardrum.
Cholesteatomas often take the form of a cyst or pouch that sheds
layers of old skin that builds up inside the ear. Over time, the
cholesteatoma can increase in size and destroy the surrounding
delicate bones of the middle ear. Hearing loss, dizziness, and
facial muscle paralysis are rare but can result from continued
cholesteatoma growth.
How Does It Occur?
A
cholesteatoma usually occurs because of poor eustachian tube function
as well as infection in the middle ear. The eustachian tube conveys
air from the back of the nose into the middle ear to equalize
ear pressure ("clear the ears"). When the eustachian
tubes work poorly perhaps due to allergy, a cold or sinusitis,
the air in the middle ear is absorbed by the body, and a partial
vacuum results in the ear. The vacuum pressure sucks in a pouch
or sac by stretching the eardrum, especially areas weakened by
previous infections. This sac often becomes a cholesteatoma. A
rare congenital form of cholesteatoma (one present at birth) can
occur in the middle ear and elsewhere, such as in the nearby skull
bones. However, the type of cholesteatoma associated with ear
infections is most common.
What Are the Symptoms?
Initially,
the ear may drain, sometimes with a foul odor. As the cholesteatoma
pouch or sac enlarges, it can cause a full feeling or pressure
in the ear, along with hearing loss. (An ache behind or in the
ear, especially at night, may cause significant discomfort.) Dizziness,
or muscle weakness on one side of the face (the side of the infected
ear) can also occur. Any, or all, of these symptoms are good reasons
to seek urgent medical evaluation.
Is It Dangerous?
Ear
cholesteatomas can be dangerous and should never be ignored. Bone
erosion can cause the infection to spread into the surrounding
areas, including the inner ear and brain. If untreated, deafness,
brain abscess, meningitis, and rarely death can occur.
What Treatment Can be Provided?
An
examination by an ear nose surgeon can confirm the presence of
a cholesteatoma. The extent or growth characteristics of a cholesteatoma
will also be evaluated.
With
rare exceptions, cholesteatomas usually require surgical treatment
to protect the patient from serious complications. Hearing and
balance tests, CAT scans (3-D x-rays) of the mastoid may be necessary.
These tests are performed to determine the hearing level remaining
in the ear and the extent of destruction the cholesteatoma has
caused.
Surgery
(called Mastoidectomy as it involves extensive bone drilling of
the mastoid bone found immediately behind the ear), is performed
under general anesthesia in most cases. The primary purpose of
the surgery is to remove the cholesteatoma and infection and achieve
an infection-free, self-cleansing dry ear. Hearing preservation
or restoration is a secondary goal of surgery. In cases of severe
ear destruction, restoration of normal hearing
may not be possible. Facial nerve repair or procedures
to control dizziness are rarely required. Reconstruction of the
middle ear to its normal anatomy is usually not possible in one
operation; and therefore, a second operation (if deemed necessary)
may be performed later.
Follow-up
office visits after surgical treatment are necessary and important,
because cholesteatoma sometimes recurs. In cases where an open
mastoidectomy cavity has been created, office visits every few
months are needed in order to clean out the mastoid cavity and
prevent new infections. In some patients, there must be lifelong
periodic ear examinations.
Summary
Cholesteatoma
is a serious but treatable ear condition which can only be diagnosed
by medical examination. Persisting earache, ear drainage, ear
pressure, hearing loss, dizziness, or facial muscle weakness signals
the need for urgent evaluation by an Ear Nose Throat Surgeon.
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