Outcomes of primary myringoplasty in indigenous children from the Northern Territory of Australia.

To report the surgical and audiological outcomes of myringoplasty (Type I tympanoplasty) in Indigenous Australian children living in remote and regional communities in northern Australia. An observational cohort study, with prospective recording of the details of surgery. Audiological outcomes were...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology
Main Authors: O'Leary, Stephen, Darke, Amelia, Currie, Kathy, Ozdowska, Katie, Patel, Hemi
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10137/7909
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijporl.2019.109634
https://www.ezpdhcs.nt.gov.au/login?url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed//31505433
Description
Summary:To report the surgical and audiological outcomes of myringoplasty (Type I tympanoplasty) in Indigenous Australian children living in remote and regional communities in northern Australia. An observational cohort study, with prospective recording of the details of surgery. Audiological outcomes were collected independently, and these data were integrated in the present study. Children aged 5-18 year underwent myringoplasty in the Northern Territory during a program initiated by the Australian Government. Surgery was performed by surgeons drawn from across Australia. 412 primary myringoplasties were performed. The mean age at surgery was 11 years. The tympanic membrane was closed in 64.2% of cases. Fascial grafting was associated with greater surgical success than cartilage. Dryness of the ear at surgery did not affect drum closure. Post-operative aural discharge was half that reported in historical literature. Surgical success was independent of the patient's age at surgery. Post-operative audiograms were available on 216 cases. At last review, hearing had improved even when the operation was not a surgical success, with hearing aid candidacy falling from 84 to 34%. Hearing was similar irrespective of the size of the perforation at surgery or the graft used and did not change with the time between surgery and review. The best hearing was associated with drum closure and Types A or C tympanograms. A conductive hearing loss persisted after surgery that was greater when there was an immobile drum. Indigenous children benefited from myringoplasty, even when the operation was not a "surgical success" as deemed by drum closure. There lower incidence of post-operative discharge from persistent perforations suggests an improvement in the ear health of the population. A persistent conductive loss persists, likely a consequence of the underlying disease but possibly from the surgery.