Abstract
Otosclerosis is a pagetoid proliferation of bone remodeling, vascular proliferation, bone resorption and new bone formation in the tympanic region of the temporal bone. The resulting anklyosis of the stapes footplate as it articulates with the oval window is the most common cause of conductive hearing loss in young to middle aged, predominantly Caucasian individuals. The characteristic histologic features have been well documented by autopsy studies of the temporal bone. Although stapedectomy is the surgical treatment for otosclerosis, the stapes specimen may be submitted for gross examination only or not examined at all. A retrospective study of 73 stapedectomy specimens (2008–2019) not including the stapes footplate. Clinical features from the electronic medical record as well as standard histologic sections from surgical specimens were reviewed. Neither the stapedal head nor crura showed histologic features of otosclerosis. There was mild osteoarthritis af fecting the head, possibly as a consequence of persistent ossicular vibration superimposed on the ankylosed rigidity. The most common changes were surface fissuring (65%), cartilaginous erosion (49%) and irregularity of the osteochondral interface (51%). An occasional osteophyte (8%) was observed. The ear ossicles, embryologically analogous to long bones of the extremities, develop via endochondral ossification and exhibit articular surfaces of hyaline cartilage. The present observations suggest that a consequence of otosclerotic ankylosis is osteoarthritis of the stapedal head. In this study, the histological features could not be correlated with the severity of hearing loss or duration of clinical disease.
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