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Updated: May 13 2017

Otosclerosis

Snapshot
  • OtosclerosisA 19-year-old woman presents to her primary care physician due to progressive left ear hearing loss. She is otherwise healthy with no significant past medical history. Her father began wearing a hearing aid around the age of 23. Tympanic membranes are normal on otoscopy. A tuning fork is placed at the center of the forehead and showed lateralization to the left ear.
Introduction
  • An autosomal dominant disease of the middle ear
    • stapedial bony overgrowth → stapedial stiffness → stapedial fixation → conductive hearing loss
      • normal bone of the stapes is replaced with sclerotic or spongiotic bone
      • small percentage of patients may experience cochlear otosclerosis → sensorineural hearing loss, or mixed hearing loss
    • most cases are bilateral (~85%)
Presentation
  • Progressive painless hearing loss
  • Patients may experience tinnitus
  • Tympanic membrane is usually normal
  • Conductive hearing loss pattern on Weber and Rinne testing
    • Weber
      • vibration is louder on affected ear
    • Rinne
      • bone conduction is greater than air conduction
Evaluation
  • Progressive conductive hearing loss in the setting of family history 
  • Tone audiometry (most useful)
Differential
  • Cerumen impaction
  • Otitis externa and media
  • Cholesteatoma
Treatment
  • Hearing aid
  • Surgical stapectomy
  • Cochlear implantation
Question
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