

 

 
 
 
 
 

 
 

 
 
 

|
|
Otosclerosis and Stapes Surgery
Clinical Significance of Stapedioplasty Biomechanics: Swimming, Diving, Flying after Stapes Surgery
Hüttenbrink K
Arnold W, Häusler R (eds): Otosclerosis and Stapes Surgery.
Adv Otorhinolaryngol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 65, pp 146-149 (DOI: 10.1159/000098791)
Abstract: A piston prosthesis in stapedioplasty significantly modifies the function of the normal
ossicular chain. Due to the fact that the ear works as a pressure receptor, a piston prosthesis
will be displaced at ambient air pressure changes in a different way than the normal stapes.
Our ear is constantly exposed to these pressure changes in daily live, for example during
swallowing, with tubal opening, with wind gusts at the external ear, during flying, or diving.
Temporal bone experiments showed that elevated static pressures, like in tympanometry, can
displace a piston up to 0.5mm in the vestibule. These large movements, which are caused by
the missing attachment of the piston to the annual ligament, may explain why a short piston
can be lifted out of the footplate perforation (e.g. after sneezing) or a piston with excessive
length might come into contact with the membranous labyrinth, causing vertigo with an
inward movement. Flying or diving can be performed by the patients after stapedioplasty,
provided that a test with tympanometry is tolerated without evoking vertigo.
|

|
© 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel
|
|
|