Abstract
AbstractIt has been classically hypothesized that a mass in the nasopharynx causes an obstacle to air flow through the eustachian tube, thereby creating a negative pressure in the middle ear followed by an effusion. However, examination of the relevant data concerning the supposed obstruction of the eustachian tube by nasopharyngeal carcinomas, choanal polyps and adenoids does not seem to support this cause and effect relationship. Evidence points to other more sophisticated mechanisms which cause negative pressure and an effusion in pathological middle ear conditions. While the hypothesis of a nasopharyngeal mass as the usual obstructive cause of middle ear effusion is hard to maintain, evidence does exist to support the origin of middle ear infection, as seen in acute and secretory otitis media, as being associated, at times, with an ascending infection from the nasopharynx.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Otorhinolaryngology,General Medicine
Cited by
36 articles.
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