NE is a relatively common finding in children with OSA symptoms. NE resolves or markedly improves in the vast majority of these patients postoperatively.
Non-secretor status due to homozygosity for the common FUT2 variant c.461G>A (p.Trp154*) is associated with either risk for autoimmune diseases or protection against viral diarrhea and HIV. We determined the role of FUT2 in otitis media susceptibility by obtaining DNA samples from 609 multi-ethnic families and simplex case subjects with otitis media. Exome and Sanger sequencing, linkage analysis, and Fisher exact and transmission disequilibrium tests (TDT) were performed. The common FUT2 c.604C>T (p.Arg202*) variant co-segregates with otitis media in a Filipino pedigree (LOD ¼ 4.0). Additionally, a rare variant, c.412C>T (p.Arg138Cys), is associated with recurrent/chronic otitis media in European-American children (p ¼ 1.2 3 10 À5) and US trios (TDT p ¼ 0.01). The c.461G>A (p.Trp154*) variant was also overtransmitted in US trios (TDT p ¼ 0.01) and was associated with shifts in middle ear microbiota composition (PERMANOVA p < 10 À7) and increased biodiversity. When all missense and nonsense variants identified in multi-ethnic US trios with CADD > 20 were combined, FUT2 variants were over-transmitted in trios (TDT p ¼ 0.001). Fut2 is transiently upregulated in mouse middle ear after inoculation with non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae. Four FUT2 variants-namely p.Ala104Val, p.Arg138Cys, p.Trp154*, and p.Arg202*-reduced A antigen in mutant-transfected COS-7 cells, while the nonsense variants also reduced FUT2 protein levels. Common and rare FUT2 variants confer susceptibility to otitis media, likely by modifying the middle ear microbiome through regulation of A antigen levels in epithelial cells. Our families demonstrate marked intra-familial genetic heterogeneity, suggesting that multiple combinations of common and rare variants plus environmental factors influence the individual otitis media phenotype as a complex trait.
Oxymetazoline and ciprofloxacin solutions are equivalent in the prevention of postoperative otorrhea and tube occlusion after tympanostomy tube placement. The implications for medication cost and potential adverse reactions are discussed.
A three-year retrospective study was performed on 494 patients to compare the effects of two techniques of tonsillectomy, with respect to rates of postoperative bleeding. One surgeon performed primarily mechanical dissections, while the other primarily performed electrocautery dissections. Intraoperative blood loss was assessed and correlated to the age and gender of the patient and to the size of the tonsil. Postoperative bleeding was seen in 2.8% of patients who underwent electrocautery tonsillectomy and in 7.6% of patients who underwent mechanical tonsillectomies. Patients undergoing electrocautery dissection lost an average of 37 ml of blood intraoperatively, whereas those undergoing mechanical dissection lost 105 ml. Mechanical tonsillectomies exhibited higher intraoperative blood loss than electrocautery tonsillectomies. A higher rate of postoperative bleeding was seen in mechanical tonsillectomies, but this difference was lost when peritonsillar abscesses were removed from the study.
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