| Literature DB >> 29335001 |
Józef Mierzwiński1, Justyna Kosowska2, Justyna Tyra2, Karolina Haber2, Maria Drela2, Dariusz Paczkowski3, Paweł Burduk4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fibrous dysplasia is a slowly progressive benign fibro-osseous disorder that involves one or multiple bones with a unilateral distribution in most cases. It is a lesion of unknown etiology, uncertain pathogenesis, and diverse histopathology. Temporal bone involvement is the least frequently reported type, especially in children. We reviewed available articles regarding fibrous dysplasia with temporal bone involvement in children and added four patients aged 7 to 17 years who were diagnosed and treated in our institution from 2006 to 2017. The patients' clinical picture comprised head deformity, external canal stenosis, headache, progressive conductive and/or sensorineural hearing loss, tinnitus, and sudden deafness. Two patients had experienced severe episodic vertigo with nausea and vomiting. Two were referred to us with external canal obstruction and secondary cholesteatoma formation with broad middle ear destruction. One was diagnosed with acute mastoiditis and intracranial complications. Optimal management of fibrous dysplasia is unclear and can be challenging, especially in children. In our two patients with disease expansion and involvement of important structures, surgical treatment was abandoned and a "wait-and-scan" policy was applied. The other two were qualified for surgical treatment. One patient underwent two surgeries: modified lateral petrosectomy (canal left open) with pathological tissue removal, cavity obliteration, and subsequent tympanoplasty. Another patient with extensive destruction of the left temporal bone underwent canal wall down mastoidectomy with perisinus abscess drainage and revision 12 months later. Tympanoplasty was unsatisfactory in both patients because of slow progression of the middle ear pathology. None of our patients underwent pharmacological treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Child; Fibrous dysplasia; Temporal bone
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29335001 PMCID: PMC5769533 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-017-1302-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Fig. 1a Coronal CT scan shows involvement of the petrous part of the right temporal bone. The superior semicircular canal is surrounded by dysplasia. b Axial CT scan shows erosion of the labyrinth and involvement of the posterior semicircular canal. c Axial CT scan shows massive changes in the petrous part and a fistula of the superior semicircular canal
Fig. 2a Axial CT scan shows an expansive lesion of the right petrous apex. b Coronal CT scan demonstrates fibrous dysplasia of the right temporal bone that has led to external deformity
Fig. 3a Magnetic resonance imaging. T1-weighted image. b T2-weighted image. c Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted image shows a heterogeneous mass with contrast enhancement. The radiographic features of the lesion did not allow an experienced radiologist to establish the diagnosis
Fig. 4a Postoperative sagittal CT scan shows a large cavity after petrosectomy obliterated with the temporalis muscle. b Axial CT scan shows a large cavity after petrosectomy in the right temporal bone
Fig. 5a Axial CT scan at the level of the cochlea demonstrates extensive involvement of the left temporal bone by fibrous dysplasia. b Axial CT scan at the level of the stylomastoid foramen demonstrates extensive involvement of the left temporal bone by fibrous dysplasia
Fig. 6a Coronal CT scan shows a fistula of the posterior semicircular canal. b Sagittal CT scan shows extensive involvement of the petrous apex of the temporal bone by fibrous dysplasia and involvement of the labyrinth
Fig. 7a Axial CT scan of the temporal bone shows massive destruction of the mastoid area with external osteolysis and a fistula in the temporal area. b Axial CT scan at the level of the oval window shows massive fibrous dysplasia involving the temporal bone as well as opacification of the mastoid and middle ear cavity with ossicles destruction and stenosis of the external auditory canal
Fig. 8a Axial scan at the level of the labyrinth shows typical fibrous dysplasia-related ground-glass changes around the geniculate ganglion. b Axial CT scan at the level of the cochlea 1 year after surgery shows obliteration of the postoperative cavity
Fig. 9a Coronal scan shows obliteration of the external auditory canal with broad changes and osteolysis of the temporal bone. b Coronal scan post-op. shows involvement of the middle ear and stapes
Previously published reports of temporal bone FD in children
| Author | No. | Age | Sex | Symptoms | Form | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present study | 1 | 7 | M | Vertigo, nausea, vomiting, tinittus, headache, local swelling | Monostotic | Nonsurgical |
| 2 | 16 | F | Headaches, skull asymmetry, HL, mass, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Modified lateral petrosectomy with complete removal of the lesion | |
| 3 | 13 | F | HL, vertigo, tinittus, vomiting, visual disorder | Polyostotic | Nonsurgical | |
| 4 | 16 | M | Mastoiditis, HL, EAC stenosis, otalgia, otorrhea, mass, left ear cholesteatoma | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, perisinus abscess drainage, revision | |
| Previously published reports of temporal bone FD in children | ||||||
| Articles added after screening the references | ||||||
| Celenk et al. [ | 1 | 17 | F | Painless, unilateral mandibular swelling | Polyostotic | Nonsurgical-periodic follow up |
| Fattah et al. [ | 2 | 6 | – | Facial asymmetry, malocclusion | Monostotic | No data |
| 3 | 6 | – | Mass | Monostotic | No data | |
| 4 | 17 | – | Mass, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | No data | |
| 5 | 14 | – | Mass | Polyostotic | No data | |
| 6 | 8 | – | Snoring, epistaxis, deteriorating acuity; | Polyostotic | No data | |
| Couturier et al. [ | 7 | 10 | M | EAC stenosis (normal hearing) | Monostotic | Canaloplasty, osseointegrated implant |
| Reports not listed in PubMed reviewed by Megerian | ||||||
| Megerian et al. [ | 8 | 5 | F | Vertigo, SNHL, FN paralysis | Monostotic | Nonsurgical |
| 9 | 7 | F | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Nonsurgical | |
| 10 | 16 | M | Mass | Monostotic | Mastoid surgery | |
| 11 | 3 | M | Otitis, EAC stenosis, SNHL, EAC cholesteatoma | Polyostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty | |
| 12 | 17 | F | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Canaloplasty, mastoidectomy | |
| 13 | 11 | M | HL | Monostotic | Canaloplasty, mastoidectomy | |
| 14 | 11 | M | HL, mass, EAC stenosis, EAC cholesteatoma, FN palsy | Monostotic | Mastoid surgery | |
| 15 | 9 | M | HL, EAC stenosis | Polyostotic | Canaloplasty | |
| 16 | 16 | F | HL, otalgia, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Nonsurgical | |
| 17 | 14 | M | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Mastoid surgery | |
| Articles listed in PubMed | ||||||
| Pardo-Maza et al. [ | 18 | 16 | F | Recurrent suppurative otitis media, HL | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, |
| Du et al. [ | 19 | 16 | M | Painless vision loss in both eyes | Polyostotic | Nonsurgical |
| Shakeel et al. [ | 20 | 16 | M | Painless swelling—temporal area, no other symptoms | Polyostotic | Affected temporal bone was resected, and gross total removal was achieved |
| Yang et al. [ | 21 | 15 | F | HL, EAC stenosis, EAC cholesteatoma | Monostotic | Canaloplasty |
| Cai et al. [ | 22 | 15 | M | Local lump, facial malformation | Monostotic | Surgical resection |
| 23 | 6 | M | Atypical headaches | Polyostotic | Surgical resection | |
| 24 | 15 | F | Atypical headaches, proptosis | Polyostotic | Complete removal and reconstruction with a titanium allegation implant | |
| 25 | 11 | M | Local lump | Monostotic | Complete removal and reconstruction with a titanium implant | |
| 26 | 14 | F | Local lump, HL | Polyostotic | Complete removal and reconstruction with a titanium implant | |
| Jethanamest et al. [ | 27 | 17 | M | HL, EAC atresia, cholesteatoma | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty |
| Kim et al. [ | 28 | 17 | F | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty |
| 29 | 13 | M | HL, EAC stenosis, cholesteatoma | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty | |
| 30 | 16 | M | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty | |
| 31 | 14 | M | EAC stenosis, ear fullness | Monostotic | Canaloplasty | |
| 32 | 14 | M | Sudden HL-fluctuating SNHL, vertigo | Monostotic | Transmastoid labyrinthectomy | |
| Keskin et al. [ | 33 | 16 | F | Painful facial swelling-mandible | Polyostotic | Segmental mandibulectomy, mass resection |
| Martinez et al. [ | 34 | 7 | M | HL, EAC stenosis, mass, proptosis, trismus, bleeding, head pain | Polyostotic | Nonsurgical-medical therapy, EAC debris removed |
| Sreetharan et al. [ | 35 | 16 | M | Postauricular swelling, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Nonsurgical-managed conservatively |
| Tweddle et al. [ | 36 | 16 | M | Recurrent otitis externa, tinnitus, EAC stenosis, normal hearing | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, EAC reconstruction |
| Ozbek et al. [ | 37 | 10 | F | HL, postauricular swelling, recurrent otitis externa, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Nonsurgical-periodic CT scanning |
| Magu et al. [ | 38 | 15 | F | Headache, facial asymmetry–FN palsy | Polyostotic | No data |
| Lustig et al. [ | 39 | 15 | – | HL, EAC stenosis | McCune–Albright syndrome | Canalplasty |
| 40 | 11 | – | Proptosis | Polyostotic | Surgical drainage, cystoethmoidistomy, pericranial closure | |
| 41 | 17 | – | Headache | Monostotic | Middle fossa mass excision | |
| Chinski et al. [ | 42 | 16 | M | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Nonsurgical-periodically examined |
| Ohta et al. [ | 43 | 16 | M | Tumor | Monostotic | Surgical |
| Megerian et al. [ | 44 | 4 | M | Tumor, HL, otalgia, otorrhea, EAC stenosis, recurrent otitis externa | Monostotic | Nonsurgical |
| 45 | 9 | F | HL, EAC stenosis, otalgia, otitis externa | Monostotic | Surgical, infratemporal approach | |
| 46 | 12 | F | HL, EAC stenosis, canal cholesteatoma, aural pressure, facial asymmetry | Polyostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty | |
| 47 | 12 | F | HL, EAC stenosis, trismus, otalgia, otorrhea | Monostotic | Canaloplasty | |
| 48 | 5 | F | HL, EAC stenosis, mass | Polyostotic | Conservative | |
| 49 | 10 | F | HL, EAC stenosis, frontal region protrusion, aural fullness, facial asymmetry, otitis externa | Polyostotic | Surgical-maxilla | |
| 50 | 2 | M | EAC stenosis, HL in audio, FN paralysis | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty, tympanoplasty, FN decompression | |
| Mizuno et al. [ | 51 | 16 | F | Temporal pain, temporal area deformation, malocclusion | McCune–Albright syndrome | Surgical-mandible |
| Kessler et al. [ | 52 | 15 | M | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Nonsurgical |
| Talmi et al. [ | 53 | 15 | F | Recurrent otitis externa, HL, EAC stenosis, ear fullness | Monostotic | Surgical, canaloplasty |
| Younus et al. [ | 54 | 9/12 | M | Mass, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty |
| Smoucha et al. [ | 55 | 14 | M | HL, EAC stenosis, mass, otitis externa | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty |
| Sataloff et al. [ | 56 | 9 | F | HL, EAC stenosis | Polyostotic | Mastoidectomy, canalplasty |
| Nishioka et al. [ | 57 | 11 | M | Epileptic attacks, mass, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | No data |
| Nager et al. [ | 58 | 10 | M | HL, EAC stenosis, EAC cholesteatoma | McCune–Albright syndrome | Canaloplasty |
| 59 | 10 | M | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | PE tube | |
| Barrionuevo et al. [ | 60 | 11 | F | Mass, otalgia | Monostotic | Nonsurgical |
| 61 | 3 | F | Premature puberty | McCune–Albright syndrome | Nonsurgical | |
| Williams et al. [ | 62 | 10 | F | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canalooplasty |
| Talbot et al. [ | 63 | 12 | M | HL, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Canaloplasty |
| Cohen et al. [ | 64 | 8 | F | Mass, EAC stenosis, FN paralysis, SNHL | Polyostotic | Mastoid surgery |
| 65 | 9 | M | Mass, EAC stenosis | Monostotic | Mastoidectomy, canaloplasty | |
| Wong et al. [ | 66 | 13 | F | HL, mass, EAC stenosis, EAC cholesteatoma | Monostotic | Canaloplasty |
HL hearing loss, SNHL sensorineural hearing loss, EAC external auditory canal, FN facial nerve