Congenital Anomalies of the Ear

Congenital Anomalies of the Ear

Congenital Anomalies of the Ear

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Outer Ear - Pinna & Canal Quirks

  • Pinna Anomalies:
    • Microtia: Underdeveloped pinna. Four grades:
      • Grade I: Smaller, mostly normal.
      • Grade III: Rudimentary; often with canal atresia.
      • Grade IV: Anotia (absent pinna).
    • Cryptotia: "Hidden ear"; superior pinna buried.
    • Stahl's Ear: "Spock ear"; third crus, pointed helix.
    • Lop Ear / Cup Ear: Variations in prominence and constriction.
    • Preauricular Tags/Pits/Sinuses: Common, anterior to tragus.
      • 📌 "First arch gives tags, pits, and snags." (Branchial arch remnants)
  • External Auditory Canal (EAC) Anomalies:
    • EAC Atresia: Absent canal (bony/membranous). Significant conductive hearing loss.
    • EAC Stenosis: Narrowed canal. Prone to cerumen impaction, otitis externa.

Grades of Microtia

⭐ Treacher Collins Syndrome is frequently associated with bilateral microtia and EAC atresia, impacting hearing.

Middle & Inner Ear - Deep Dive Defects

  • Middle Ear:
    • Ossicular defects: Incudostapedial discontinuity (most common), stapes fixation.
    • Congenital Cholesteatoma: Epithelial rest, intact TM.
    • Window atresia: Oval or round.
  • Inner Ear (Cochleovestibular):
    • Cochlear Aplasias:
      • Michel: Complete labyrinthine aplasia.
      • Mondini: Basal turn + cystic apex; dilated vestibule/SCCs.
      • Scheibe: Cochleosaccular dysplasia (pars inferior); most common.
      • Alexander: Basal coil cochlear duct aplasia; high-freq SNHL.
    • Enlarged Vestibular Aqueduct (EVA).
    • 📌 Aplasias: My Mother Sees All (Michel, Mondini, Scheibe, Alexander).

    ⭐ Mondini deformity is often linked to Pendred syndrome (goiter, SNHL). Cochlear Development and Anomalies

Syndromic Soundscapes - Ears Tell Tales

  • 👂 Ear anomalies often signal systemic genetic conditions.
  • Treacher Collins (TCS): AD (TCOF1).
    • Mandibular/malar hypoplasia (bird facies).
    • Microtia, EAC atresia, CHL.
    • Lower lid coloboma.
  • Branchio-Oto-Renal (BOR): AD (EYA1).
    • Branchial anomalies (fistulae, cysts).
    • Ear: Pits, tags, microtia, CHL/SNHL/Mixed.
    • Renal anomalies (kidney USG!).
  • CHARGE Syndrome: AD (CHD7).
    • Coloboma, Heart, Atresia choanae, Retardation, Genital, Ear (all parts; SNHL/CHL).

    ⭐ Ear anomalies (external, middle, inner) occur in >90% of CHARGE syndrome cases.

  • Goldenhar (OAVS):
    • Hemifacial microsomia.
    • Microtia, preauricular tags.
    • Epibulbar dermoids, vertebral defects.
  • Down Syndrome (Trisomy 21):
    • Small, low-set ears, stenotic EAC.
    • ↑ Otitis media, CHL/SNHL. Treacher Collins Syndrome Features

Clinical Approach - Hearing The Plan

  • History Taking: Crucial for etiology.
    • Prenatal: Maternal infections (TORCH), teratogenic drug exposure.
    • Perinatal: Hypoxia, prematurity, hyperbilirubinemia (kernicterus), birth trauma.
    • Postnatal: Meningitis, ototoxic drugs, trauma.
    • Family history: Genetic syndromes, consanguinity.
  • Clinical Examination:
    • Otoscopy: External auditory canal (EAC) atresia/stenosis, tympanic membrane (TM) status.
    • Auricle: Microtia, anotia, preauricular tags/pits.
    • Craniofacial assessment: Associated syndromic features (e.g., Treacher Collins, Goldenhar).
  • Audiological Evaluation: Age-appropriate testing.
    • Objective tests (newborns/infants < 6 months): Otoacoustic Emissions (OAEs), Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR).
    • Behavioral tests (> 6 months): Visual Reinforcement Audiometry (VRA), Conditioned Play Audiometry (CPA).
  • Imaging:
    • CT Temporal Bone: For bony labyrinth, ossicular chain, EAC, mastoid development.
    • MRI: For cochlear nerve aplasia/hypoplasia, inner ear malformations, central auditory pathways.
  • Genetic Counseling & Testing: Especially if syndromic or familial hearing loss.
  • Multidisciplinary Team (MDT): ENT surgeon, audiologist, pediatrician, geneticist, speech-language pathologist.

Neonatal hearing screening and assessment

⭐ The "1-3-6" rule for Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI) is critical: screen by 1 month, diagnose by 3 months, and initiate intervention by 6 months of age to optimize speech and language development.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Microtia is strongly linked to Treacher Collins and Goldenhar syndromes.
  • Preauricular sinuses: common, risk of recurrent infection, often bilateral.
  • First branchial cleft anomalies (Work Type I & II) affect the EAC and parotid.
  • EAC atresia often means microtia and ossicular issues, causing CHL.
  • CHARGE syndrome is a key syndromic cause of multiple ear/hearing defects.
  • Early hearing screening and amplification are vital for speech.
  • Atresia/microtia surgery is multi-staged, typically from age 6-10 years.

Practice Questions: Congenital Anomalies of the Ear

Test your understanding with these related questions

Which of the following is not typically associated with Treacher Collins syndrome?

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Flashcards: Congenital Anomalies of the Ear

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Laryngomalacia presents with _____ during infancy due to collapse of supraglottic tissues during inspiration

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Laryngomalacia presents with _____ during infancy due to collapse of supraglottic tissues during inspiration

inspiratory stridor

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