Abstract
The rate of residual disease after surgery for acquired middle ear cholesteatoma was investigated in 167 ears of 164 patients who had undergone planned second-look tympanoplasty by the intact canal wall technique. Overall, operative findings at the second stage revealed 65 cases of residual disease in 48 ears (29%). These consisted of 50 squamous pearls, 11 cases of the flat, open type, and 4 cases of the extensive type. The configuration of residual disease is closely related to the technical difficulty of eradication, since en bloc removal is much easier in the squamous pearl than in the open or extensive type, mainly because of the unclear margin with the surrounding tissues. The proportion of cases of the open type was greater in children than in adults, in pars tensa cholesteatoma than in pars flaccida cholesteatoma, and in severe primary middle ear disease than in moderate or mild disease, although these differences were not statistically significant. The extensive type occurred in 4 ears with severe primary disease, 3 of which were in children. These results support the value and importance of the staged procedure for middle ear cholesteatoma, particularly when operated on by the intact canal wall technique.
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