Traumatic fracture of the stapes suprastructure following minor head injury
Traumatic fracture of the stapes suprastructure following minor head injury
Traumatic fracture of the stapes occurs rarely following head injury. Ossicular dislocation is more commonly encountered. When present, stapes fractures are usually associated with an underlying temporal bone fracture. A higher incidence has been reported in childhood, possibly because of the greater flexibility of the skull in this age group. This report highlights the fact that these fractures can be associated with a relatively minor head injury. This possibility should be kept in mind when evaluating patients, especially children, who have a persistent conductive deafness of more than 30 dB with an intact tympanic membrane following any form of head injury. An exploratory tympanotomy with appropriate ossicular reconstruction, as described in this case, can yield excellent results.
Adolescent, Fractures, Bone/etiology, Head Injuries, Closed/complications, Humans, Male, Ossicular Prosthesis, Stapes/injuries, Stapes Surgery/methods
457-9
Singh, Shomeshwar
d3460441-5b81-4a87-aa39-b4031f6d5191
Salib, Rami J
d6fde1c1-5b5e-43f7-ae1c-42cce6a0c9fc
Oates, John
29ab1ea6-33d8-4955-aa19-35abf472a694
June 2002
Singh, Shomeshwar
d3460441-5b81-4a87-aa39-b4031f6d5191
Salib, Rami J
d6fde1c1-5b5e-43f7-ae1c-42cce6a0c9fc
Oates, John
29ab1ea6-33d8-4955-aa19-35abf472a694
Singh, Shomeshwar, Salib, Rami J and Oates, John
(2002)
Traumatic fracture of the stapes suprastructure following minor head injury.
The Journal of Laryngology & Otology, 116 (6), .
(doi:10.1258/0022215021911068).
Abstract
Traumatic fracture of the stapes occurs rarely following head injury. Ossicular dislocation is more commonly encountered. When present, stapes fractures are usually associated with an underlying temporal bone fracture. A higher incidence has been reported in childhood, possibly because of the greater flexibility of the skull in this age group. This report highlights the fact that these fractures can be associated with a relatively minor head injury. This possibility should be kept in mind when evaluating patients, especially children, who have a persistent conductive deafness of more than 30 dB with an intact tympanic membrane following any form of head injury. An exploratory tympanotomy with appropriate ossicular reconstruction, as described in this case, can yield excellent results.
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Published date: June 2002
Keywords:
Adolescent, Fractures, Bone/etiology, Head Injuries, Closed/complications, Humans, Male, Ossicular Prosthesis, Stapes/injuries, Stapes Surgery/methods
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Local EPrints ID: 503734
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503734
ISSN: 0022-2151
PURE UUID: 947e0f82-9b61-4abf-93b9-65a2c8c114b6
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Date deposited: 12 Aug 2025 16:40
Last modified: 13 Aug 2025 02:00
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Author:
Shomeshwar Singh
Author:
John Oates
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