Abstract

The postoperative long-term hearing results, with special reference to the state and management of the tympanic mucosa at operation, in 627 ears (574 patients) after an annual clinical follow-up period of 5-14 years are presented. The ears were operated on radically due to chronic otitis media, using the obliterative radical operation technique developed by T. Palva. The air-bone gap improved from the preoperative level significantly more in ears where the tympanic mucosa had been preserved than in ears where it had been removed at operation (p less than 0.001). The improvement was also significantly better in dry ears than in ears which were moist or discharging at operation (p less than 0.05). The mean late deterioration in the air-bone gap after the first follow-up year was significant in all the groups of ears (p less than 0.05), and the mean long-term change in air-bone gap from pre- to late postoperative examination was the improvement of 3.0 dB in ears with, and a deterioration of 2.0 dB in ears without ossicular reconstruction.

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