Previous Page  4 / 23 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 4 / 23 Next Page
Page Background

Page 52

Notes:

conferenceseries

.com

Volume 7, Issue 4 (Suppl)

Otolaryngology

ISSN: 2161-119X Otolaryngology, an open access journal

Aesthetic Medicine & ENT Conference 2017

July 06-08, 2017

July 06-08, 2017 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

International Conference on

Aesthetic Medicine and ENT

The location of tympanic membrane perforation and hearing loss

Hoseok Lee

Bucheon St. Mary’s Hospital - Catholic University of Korea, South Korea

P

erforations of the tympanic membrane (TM) can result from trauma, middle-ear disease, or the treatment of middle-ear disease.

I aim to assess the level of hearing loss in different sizes and sites of TM perforation in patients undergoing myringoplasty or

tympanoplasty and to correlate the size and site of TM perforation. Records from 128 patients who had undergone tympanoplasty or

myringoplasty at our clinic between August 2008 and November 2012 were examined retrospectively for this study. For evaluating the

TM, the site of the perforation was classified as the following divisions: 3 quadrants (Anterior, Posterior and Central). Audiometric

evaluation was performed using a clinical audiometer calibrated according to ISO standard. Hearing level was measured as the mean

air conduction and mean air-bone gap (ABG) threshold at 500, 1000, 2000, and 3000 Hz and, we also categorized the frequencies as low

frequency (250, 500, 1000) and high frequency (2000, 3000, 4000, 6000) to analyze the hearing in detail. We categorized the location

of TM perforation simply as anterior 56 (43.8%), posterior 42 (32.8%) and central 30 (23.4%) based on the relation of the center of the

perforation with the line extending from the malleus handle. According to the mean ABG among the groups, ANOVA analysis revealed

that, they have significant difference (

p=

0.008). Categories of the hearing loss was classified as low frequency (250, 500, 1000 Hz) and

high frequency (2000, 3000, 4000, 6000 Hz). We found that the posterior perforation in TM showed increasing air conduction and ABG

at low frequency hearing level (

p=

0.023,

p=

0.072).

Biography

Hoseok Lee completed MD from Bucheon St. Mary’s Hospital, Catholic University College of Medicine. He is working in Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Sugery

department as an Otology Clinical Fellow.

idea0527@gmail.com

Hoseok Lee, Otolaryngology 2017, 7:4 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2161-119X-C1-020