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  • Title: Incidence of regeneration of the chorda tympani nerve after middle ear surgery.
    Author: Saito T, Shibamori Y, Manabe Y, Yamagishi T, Igawa H, Ohtsubo T, Saito H.
    Journal: Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol; 2002 Apr; 111(4):357-63. PubMed ID: 11991589.
    Abstract:
    We retrospectively reviewed 52 patients who underwent middle ear surgery during which the chorda tympani nerves were severed and who then underwent secondary surgery 1 to 5 years later. In 22 patients (42.3%), regenerated chorda tympani nerves (entire length of the tympanic segment) were detected in the submucosal layer of the reconstructed eardrum during the secondary surgery. Before the secondary surgery, 16 patients (30.8%) showed threshold recovery on electrogustometry. When 5 regenerated nerves were observed by transmission electron microscopy, myelinated nerve fibers were detected in a small fascicle or connective tissue, but the number of myelinated axons was significantly decreased (7.4% to 84.6%; p = .01) compared with that in normal subjects (1,911 +/- 324; n = 4). There was a significant difference in the incidence of regeneration between the group with end-to-end anastomosis (5/5 or 100%) and that with nerve gap defects (17/47 or 36.2%; p <.05); this finding suggests that repair of the sectioned nerve produces a better incidence of regeneration than leaving the nerve unrepaired.
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