Sclerosis of the mastoid portion of the temporal bone is often seen on radiographs of patients who have or have had chronic otitis media. Occasionally lesions are seen that cause sclerosis of the entire temporal bone. The otolaryngologist must be alert to the fact that these findings may signify important pathology beyond that of chronic otitis media and indeed may be indicative of life threatening problems in adjacent or distant areas. In this paper the differential diagnoses of sclerotic lesions of the temporal bone will be discussed. These include fibrous dysplasia, osteopetrosis, meningioma, ossifying fibroma and metastatic lesions to the temporal bone. Three representative cases with sclerotic temporal bones are presented. The first is a patient with a conductive hearing loss secondary to stenosis of the external auditory canal. He was found to have a fibrous dysplasia of the temporal bone. The second case is an elderly male with a draining ear and a facial nerve paresis. He was found to have adenocarcinoma of the prostate gland metastatic to the temporal bone. The third case is that of a woman with a meningioma who demonstrated a sclerotic temporal bone on routine radiographs of the skull.
Many cochlear implant recipients have some measurable hearing prior to implantation. Animal studies have demonstrated some loss of viable neural elements resulting from both mechanical insertion trauma and long-term electrical stimulation. The effect of implantation of a long intracochlear multichannel electrode array and subsequent electrical stimulation on residual hearing was evaluated. Forty consecutive cochlear implant recipients were assessed by audiometry at the Colorado Ear Clinic between July 1985 and June 1988. Twelve of these patients (30%) had some measurable residual hearing before implantation, although all had profound hearing loss, with no understanding of speech. All patients received a multichannel cochlear implant with all 22 electrodes inserted in each patient by an experienced cochlear implant surgeon. Audiometric testing was repeated between 2 and 24 months after implantation. Pure-tone threshold responses in the implanted ear were significantly reduced postimplant, while pure-tone threshold responses in the nonimplanted ear were stable.
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