Chorda tympani injury: operative findings and postoperative symptoms
- PMID: 17547991
- DOI: 10.1016/j.otohns.2006.12.022
Chorda tympani injury: operative findings and postoperative symptoms
Abstract
Objectives: This study aims to assess whether operative findings of chorda tympani nerve (CTN) trauma correlate with postoperative symptoms.
Study design and setting: A prospective study was conducted over 2 years on 140 middle ear operations analyzing taste disturbances. The operations were subdivided into myringoplasty/tympanoplasty (56 cases), mastoidectomy (64 cases), and tympanotomy (20 cases).
Results: Twenty-one (15%) patients reported taste disturbance. Altered taste was most reported (n=15, 71%) with loss of taste reported by 29% (n=6). Symptoms were most observed in the tympanotomy group (45%). Stretching of the CTN was associated with more symptoms than nerve transection. Recovery was complete in 76% (n=16) of the symptomatic cases by 12 months.
Conclusion: Patients who undergo middle ear surgery should be thoroughly counseled with respect to CTN injury and symptoms regardless of the type of damage to the nerve.
Significance: This study highlights the high incidence of postoperative alterations in taste after middle ear surgery, especially in non-diseased ears, and that CTN transection results in fewer symptoms than CTN stretching.
Comment in
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Re: Chorda tympani injury: operative findings and postoperative symptoms.Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2008 May;138(5):694; author reply 694-5. doi: 10.1016/j.otohns.2008.01.024. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2008. PMID: 18439486 No abstract available.
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