Mastoiditis surgery

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Mastoiditis Microchapters

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:

Overview

Surgery

Surgical treatment indications in mastoiditis:

    • Intracranial complications.
    • Cholesteatoma.
    • Not achieving adequate response after 24 to 48 hours of starting treatment
    • Evidence of postauricular fluctuation and subperiosteal abscess.
    • Diagnosis of acute coalescent mastoiditis.
    • Otorrhoea persisting for more than 2 weeks despite adequate antibiotic treatment.[1]

Surgical procedures and indications:

  • Incision and drainage of the mastoid abscess:
    • when fluctuation presents drainage must be done immediately and the pus should be to achieve complete drainage of the pus.
  • Myringotomy
    • Myringotomy is surgical perforation of the tympanic membrane
    • It should be considered as a primary treatment in all cases of mastoiditis when there is an unperforated tympanic membrane or inadequate drainage. Myringotomy may be done with or without tympanostomy tube placement.
  • Tympanocentesis
  • Otorrhea is a possible complication of performing a myringotomy with a tympanostomy tube, affecting up to 17% of intubated ears.[3]
  • Definitive surgery is mastoidectomy, which is the surgical removal of the mastoid cortical bone and underlying air cells.
    • Cortical mastoidectomy is the best choice of therapy; however
    • open mastoidectomy should be performed if cholesteatoma is present
    • Simple mastoidectomy is performed to clean out the mastoid infection and provide external drainage
    • Radical mastoidectomy is performed only when there is no clinical response to simple mastoidectomy, as evidenced by continued otorrhea or pain
  • Indications for mastoidectomy may include:
    • Subperiosteal abscess, such as postauricular fluctuance or mass
  • Coalescent mastoiditis in CT scan (regardless of other clinical features)
  • Chronic suppurative otitis media or cholesteatoma
  • Progression of postauricular swelling or fluctuance, fever, and other clinical findings or continuous drainage despite parenteral antimicrobial therapy and Myringotomy.

References

  1. Zanetti D, Nassif N (2006). "Indications for surgery in acute mastoiditis and their complications in children". Int. J. Pediatr. Otorhinolaryngol. 70 (7): 1175–82. doi:10.1016/j.ijporl.2005.12.002. PMID 16413617.

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