Congenital aural atresia A new subclassification and surgical management

Abstract
The 4 surgical methods currently in use to improve hearing in patients with congenital aural atresia are fenestration of the lateral semicircular canal, type III tympanoplasty, canal plasty and canal plasty with homograft tympanoplasty. Because the surgery is difficult and the functional results are not always good, the criteria for surgery are also influenced as to whether the anomaly is unilateral or bilateral and what the cosmetic goal is. When aural rehabilitation and cosmetric surgery are contemplated, coordinated planning by the otological and plastic surgeon is necessary to attain the best end result. Of the 36 ears with a type II anomaly operated on at the Unversity of Nijmegen [The Netherlands] between 1972-1983 by the technique of canal plasty, the average hearing gain was 20 dB, with 18 patients having at 35 dB or better air conduction threshold. The functional results seem to be related to the degree of malformation involved. Classification of the malformations proved useful in discussing the surgical results.

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