| Literature DB >> 30840222 |
Jacek Sokołowski1, Magdalena Lachowska2, Emilia Karchier1, Robert Bartoszewicz1, Kazimierz Niemczyk1.
Abstract
Skull base osteomyelitis is a serious disease with a high risk of complications including neuroinfection. Typically, the inflammation of the skull base results from infection from neighboring tissues. In case of malignant otitis externa, inflammation disseminates from the external auditory canal. In this study, we present our experience with seven patients diagnosed with skull base osteomyelitis that began with otitis externa and have been treated in our department for the last 10 years. Department Patient Database was searched for the diagnosis skull base osteomyelitis. The search covered the last 10 years. The search revealed seven patients who met the above-described criteria. Medical records of those patients were carefully analyzed including age, gender, symptoms and signs, diagnostics details, treatment, performed procedures, number of hospitalization days, comorbid diseases, and complications including any cranial nerve palsy. Detailed analysis of medical records of patients included in this study showed that skull base osteomyelitis presents a challenge for diagnosis and treatment. Treatment strategy requires prolonged aggressive intravenous antibiotic therapy, and in some cases combined with surgical intervention. Cranial nerve paresis indicates progression of the disease and is associated with longer hospital stay. Similar relationship is observed in patients with skull base osteomyelitis that required surgery. Diabetes in patient's medical history may complicate the healing process. Diabetes, neural involvement, and surgery may overlap each other resulting in longer hospital stay. Cranial nerve paresis may not resolve completely and some neural deficits become persistent.Entities:
Keywords: Cranial nerve; Osteomyelitis; Otitis media; Skull base
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30840222 PMCID: PMC6710213 DOI: 10.1007/s13760-019-01110-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurol Belg ISSN: 0300-9009 Impact factor: 2.396
Clinical characteristics of each patient diagnosed with skull base osteomyelitis: gender, age, comorbid diseases, initial and final diagnosis, side of infection, and hospitalization time
| Patient # | Gender | Age | Comorbid diseases | Initial diagnosis | Final diagnosis | Side of infection | Hospitalization time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 59 | Diabetes Adison–Biermer anemia Allergic rhinitis | Otitis externa | Malignant otitis externa. Skull base inflammation | L | 92 |
| 2 | M | 60 | Diabetes | Petrous apicitis | Petrous apex abscess. Skull base inflammation | R | 75 |
| 3 | F | 65 | Diabetes | Skull base inflammation | Skull base inflammation | R | 16 |
| 4 | M | 81 | – | Skull base inflammation | Skull base inflammation | L | 59 |
| 5 | F | 61 | – | Chronic otitis media | Skull base inflammation | L | 3 |
| 6 | M | 83 | – | Malignant otitis externa | Malignant otitis externa | L | 12 |
| 7 | F | 32 | Diabetes | Chronic otitis media | Chronic otitis media. Skull base inflammation | L | 8 |
Clinical findings on admission, complications, microbiology results, and treatment details of each patient diagnosed with skull base osteomyelitis
| Patient # | Clinical findings on admission | Complications | Culture | Combined parenteral antibiotic therapy | Performed surgery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Otalgia, severe headache, polyp in EAC, swollen EAC, TM perforation, otorrhea | Facial nerve paresis meningitis, sepsis |
| Ciprofloxacin, ceftriaxone, clindamycin | Removal of the polyp from the external auditory canal, decompression of the facial nerve, antromastoidectomy, tympanoplasty |
| 2 | Severe headache, otorrhea, TM perforation | Facial nerve paresis |
Pseudomonas, | Vancomycin, itraconazole, ciprofloxacin | Radical mastoidectomy |
| 3 | Severe otalgia | – | Negative | Ciprofloxacin | – |
| 4 | Headache, hoarseness, vocal fold palsy, soft palate paresis, otalgia | Vagal nerve and glossopharyngeal nerve paresis | Negative | Ceftriaxone, metronidazole | Parapharyngeal space drainage |
| 5 | Swollen mastoid | – | Negative | clindamycin, amoxicillin and clavulanate acid | – |
| 6 | Otalgia, swollen EAC, swollen mastoid, TM perforation, otorrhea | – | Negative | Amoxicillin and clavulanate acid, metronidazole | Antromastoidectomy, tympanoplasty |
| 7 | Otalgia, reddened TM, swollen mastoid | – | Negative | Ciprofloxacin | – |
EAC external auditory canal, TM tympanic membrane
Fig. 1Axial T1-weighted MR images demonstrating an enhancing soft-tissue formation in the mastoid process and thrombosis of the sigmoid sinus