Subjects who were undergoing prolonged weaning from mechanical ventilation and admitted to a specialized weaning unit, showed reduced sleep quality with preservation of high amounts of slow-wave sleep.
Background: The insertion of the stapes piston into the vestibule provides the physical basis for a successful stapedotomy. In routine clinical practice, two different ways to handle prosthesis length are performed: (1) an individualized measurement of the stapes prosthesis length or (2) a standard prosthesis length for all cases. Objective: The objective of this study was to compare both ways of handling prosthesis length and the effect of these methods on insertional prosthesis depth. Material and Method: We retrospectively evaluated 39 patients after performing a stapedotomy for radiologically estimated vestibular stapes prosthesis insertion depth. The individual measured length data were hypothetically changed to a standard length of 4.75, 5, 5.25, and 5.5 mm, and the insertion depths were compared. Results: The individually measured prosthesis lengths led to an insertion depth between 0.2 and 1.6 mm (mean 0.74 mm). The ratio of insertion depth/vestibular depth was between 8 and 59.1% (mean 26.6%). The different assumed standard lengths led to different rates of the vestibulum positions and possible bony contacts at the vestibulum floor. Conclusion: The individual measurement led to a zero rate of the vestibulum positions of stapes prosthesis pistons with a low insertion depth/vestibular depth ratio.
Background: Patients with a superior canal dehiscence syndrome display symptoms of the vestibular disorder except that of hearing loss. Therefore, any type of surgery should treat those symptoms without affecting the hearing threshold. The aim of this study was to evaluate the extent to which the hearing threshold has been affected; the evaluation process was carried out by a transmastoid plugging of the superior canal. Another aim was to estimate the risk in loss of hearing due to this surgery. Material and Methods: In a retrospective study, 31 patients with dehiscence of the superior canal, who underwent a transmastoid plugging, were included. Additionally, 8 of them with the clinical symptoms of the Menière’s disease received an endolymphatic sac surgery. A b-c threshold at 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz was observed in all patients pre and postoperatively as well as in the long-term follow-up. Results: After a mean interval of 149 days, a change in the b-c threshold of 5.9 dB was detected. After 149 days, in the patient group comprising those who underwent an additional endolymphatic sac surgery, a b-c threshold change of 17.18 dB was detected. Conclusion: The transmastoid plugging of the superior semicircular canal can be performed with an acceptable risk of hearing affection. If the surgery was combined with other techniques, (e.g. endolymphatic sac surgery) then the risk increases.
Vertigo control in cases of Ménière disease and deafness can be achieved by labyrinthectomy before or as a single-stage procedure during cochlear implantation. The aim was to describe a case in which a labyrinthectomy was performed after cochlear implantation. The scar tissue was removed from the electrode cable, and the receiver was removed from the periostal pocket and placed out without electrode dislocation. Labyrinthectomy was performed after securing the electrode at the external canal. The patient disclaimed after three months no disabling vertigo. Intraoperatively, the electrode was not dislocated. A labyrinthectomy can be performed even after cochlear implantation to treat vertigo.
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