Effect of levator veli palatini muscle excision on eustachian tube function
E. I. Cantekin, W. J. Doyle and C. D. Bluestone
The role of the levator veli palatini (LVP) muscle in eustachian tube (ET)
physiology was investigated in five juvenile rhesus monkeys (Macaca
mulatta). The baseline ET function and middle ear pressures were documented
longitudinally for a period of six months prior to bilateral excision of
the LVP muscle, and postoperative ET function and middle ear status were
assessed for a period of five months. During the postoperative follow-up
period, otitis media with effusion was not observed and middle ear pressure
values remained within the normal baseline values. Parameters of ET
function as measured by the forced-response test did not show any
significant differences in comparison with baseline values. These findings
provide additional evidence that the operational biomechanics of the ET are
independent of the integrity of the LVP muscle, and that the tensor veli
palatini is the only paratubal muscle responsible for normal active opening
of the ET.