Surgical-Clinical Correlation in Unilateral Conductive Hearing Loss With Intact Tympanic Membrane
Al-Azhar University
20 participants
Jan 1, 2026
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Unilateral conductive hearing loss (UCHL) in the presence of an intact tympanic membrane represents a diagnostic challenge in otologic practice. In the absence of middle ear effusion or tympanic membrane pathology, stapes fixation secondary to otosclerosis is often considered the most probable diagnosis. However, although otosclerosis is traditionally regarded as a bilateral disease, clinical presentation may be unilateral due to asymmetric disease progression or subclinical contralateral involvement. Other etiologies, including congenital ossicular anomalies, ossicular discontinuity, tympanosclerosis without tympanic membrane involvement, or oval window abnormalities, may mimic otosclerosis both clinically and audiologically. Consequently, exploratory tympanotomy remains the gold standard for definitive diagnosis, allowing direct assessment of ossicular chain mobility and confirmation of stapes fixation. Correlating preoperative clinical suspicion with intraoperative findings is therefore essential to better define the true causes of unilateral conductive hearing loss with an intact tympanic membrane.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria1
- unilateral conductive hearing loss or mixed HL with intact Tympanic Membrane
Exclusion Criteria4
- Sensorineural hearing loss
- Chronic otitis media
- TM perforation
- Previous ear surgery
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Interventions
exploration tympanotomy of the middle ear and ossicles to diagnose or detect actual causes of conductive hearing loss and correct it according to the cause
Locations(1)
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NCT07431125