Medical Hypotheses
Volume 58, Issue 2 , Pages 141-143, February 2002

Nasal and hearing impairment: are they linked?

  • F. Salvinelli

      Affiliations

    • Professor of Otolaryngology, University Campus Bio-Medico, Rome, Italy
  • ,
  • M. Casale

      Affiliations

    • University Campus Bio-Medico, Rome, Italy
  • ,
  • M. Trivelli

      Affiliations

    • University Campus Bio-Medico, Rome, Italy
  • ,
  • F. Greco

      Affiliations

    • University Campus Bio-Medico, Rome, Italy

Received 28 March 2001; accepted 5 July 2001.

Abstract 

Hearing impairment is the most prevalent sensory deficit in the human population. Otosclerosis and chronic otitis media are two of the most frequent causes of hearing loss of the Western world and both benefit from middle ear surgery. The success rate is high for both operations, in expert hands, but, in our clinic and in every ENT clinic, there remains a percentage of failure. Some of the most frequent post-operative complications can lead to tubal dysfunction. We believe that a correct and complete evaluation of the rhino-pharyngeal-tubal unit is very important before tympanoplasty and stapedioplasty in order to further reduce the incidence of some post-operative complications and to increase the success rate of middle ear surgery. What is well known in medicine, ‘prevention is the best therapy’, seems not oddly observed in ear surgery, where is usually operated the effect, while the evaluation and therapy of the causes seems to be underestimated.

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  • f1 Correspondence to: Professor Fabrizio Salvinelli, Director, Department of Otolaryngology, University School of Medicine, Campus Bio-Medico, Rome, Via Longoni, 69/83 - 00155 Rome, Italy. Phone: +39622541740; Fax: +39622541456; E-mail: f.salvinelli@unicampus.it

PII: S0306-9877(01)91491-4

doi:10.1054/mehy.2001.1491

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 58, Issue 2 , Pages 141-143, February 2002