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  Vol. 120 No. 8, August 1994 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Micropathologic Changes of Pars Tensa in Children With Otitis Media With Effusion

Shinichi Sano, MD; Yousuke Kamide, MD; Patricia A. Schachern; Michael M. Paparella, MD

Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1994;120(8):815-819.


Abstract

Clinical studies have supported a relationship between otitis media with effusion in children and chronic otitis media in adults. Although clinical studies are numerous, relatively little is known about the histopathologic changes of the tympanic membrane in otitis media with effusion. Tympanic membranes were taken from the intermediate zone of the anteroinferior quadrant of the tympanic membrane during surgery for placement of tympanostomy tubes in 30 children (age range, 4 to 10 years) who did not show any improvement after 3 months of conservative treatment for otitis media with effusion. Control specimens were taken from normal temporal bones at autopsy. All specimens were observed with light and electron microscopy. Histologic degeneration of the tympanic membrane of patients with otitis media with effusion occurred most often in the lamina propria and the submucosal layer. There was an increase in the thickness of the tympanic membrane as a result of edema and fibrosis of the submucosal layer. A decrease in the thickness of the outer and inner fibrous layers occurred in the lamina propria. The histopathologic changes observed in the lamina propria may result in a change in the elastic properties of the tympanic membrane.

(Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1994;120:815-819)



Author Affiliations

From the University of Minnesota Otitis Media Research Center, Department of Otolaryngology, University of Minnesota School of Medicine (Drs Sano and Paparella and Ms Schachern), the Minnesota Ear, Head, and Neck Clinic (Dr Paparella), Minneapolis, and the Department of Otolaryngology, Jikeikai Medical College, Tokyo, Japan (Dr Kamide).



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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Otitis Media With Effusion
American Academy of Family Physicians et al.
Pediatrics 2004;113:1412-1429.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  





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