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Title: Otosclerosis: Shift in bone conduction after stapedotomy. Author: Sabbe A, Verhaert N, Joossen I, Lammens A, Debruyne F. Journal: B-ENT; 2015; 11(3):183-9. PubMed ID: 26601550. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To analyze changes in bone conduction (BC) thresholds before and after stapedotomy in patients with clinical otosclerosis with a focus on the Carhart notch, which is defined as a significant loss of BC at a certain audiometric frequency. METHODOLOGY: Retrospective case review of pure tone audiometry (PTA) in 213 patients who underwent a stapedotomy at a tertiary referral center between 2004 and 2011. The patients were grouped by age and the frequency of the Carhart notch. The non-operated ear was also evaluated. RESULTS: The Carhart notch was present on pre-operative audiometry in 158 (74%) patients at 0.5 (n = 18, 8.45%), 1 (n = 25, 11.70%), or 2 kHz (n = 115, 54.0%). We measured a mean postoperative improvement in BC of 7.5, 8.4, and 8.8 dB HL. Pre-operatively, 55 (25.8%) patients did not exhibit a typical notch configuration. The mean gain in BC, defined on PTA according to the AAO-HNS criteria (0.5, 1, 2 and 3, or 4 kHz), was 1.8 dB HL after stapedotomy. CONCLUSION: The Carhart notch was not solely related to the 2 kHz frequency. The greatest gain in BC after stapedotomy for otosclerosis occurred at the notch frequency.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]