Ear & Ear Tube Surgery
BMTT (Ear Tubes)
Placement of ear tubes in children
Placement of ear tubes in children is often performed at the hospital or at The Surgical Center of the DuPage Medical Group. The procedure is performed under general anesthesia that is administered by a mask. In most cases, no IV is required. Procedure length is variable, but often lasts about 15 minutes. Minimal bleeding from the ears can be expected. Once the child has woke from anesthesia, is able to drink, and parents are comfortable, everyone can go home. Immediate recovery from anesthesia can last about an hour.
Ear Tube Surgery:
Tympanoplasty
A tympanostomy tube helps prevent recurring ear infections by allowing air into the middle ear. Other substances, including water, may sometimes enter through the tube, but this is rarely a problem. Your surgeon may or may not recommend earplugs for regular bathing or swimming.
Myringotomy
Myringotomy tubes are small tubes that are surgically placed into your child’s eardrum by an ear, nose, and throat surgeon. The tubes are placed to help drain the fluid out of the middle ear in order to reduce the risk of ear infections. Myringotomies are frequently used to treat glue ear and recurring ear infections that do not respond to antibiotics.
Stapedectomy
In an operation called a stapedectomy, a surgeon (otolaryngologist or otologist) bypasses the diseased bone with a prosthetic device that allows sound waves to be passed to the inner ear.
Stapedotomy
Laser stapedotomy is a well-established surgical technique for treating conductive hearing loss due to otosclerosis. The procedure creates a tiny opening in the stapes (the smallest bone in the human body) in which to secure a prosthetic. The CO2 laser allows the surgeon to create very small, precisely placed holes without increasing the temperature of the inner ear fluid by more than one degree, making this an extremely safe surgical solution. The hole diameter can be predetermined according to the prosthesis diameter. Treatment can be completed in a single office visit using anesthesia.
Tympanomastoidectomy
Ossiculoplasty
Ossicular chain reconstruction
BAHA Implant
The Baha is a surgically implantable system for treatment of hearing loss that works through direct bone conduction. Baha is used to help people with chronic ear infections, congenital external auditory canal atresia and single sided deafness who cannot benefit from conventional hearing aids. The system is surgically implanted and allows sound to be conducted through the bone rather than via the middle ear — a process known as direct bone conduction.