Affiliation:
1. Department of Oral Surgery Ahmet Keleşoglu Faculty of Dentistry Karaman Turkey
2. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology Ahmet Keleşoglu Faculty of Dentistry Karaman Turkey
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundForamen tympanicum (FT) is a defect located anterior‐inferior to the external acoustic meatus. We evaluated its prevalence, location, size, and relationship with temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disorders.MethodsCone beam computed tomography was performed for 200 patients who presented to the Karamanoğlu Mehmetbey University Ahmet Keleşoğlu Faculty of Dentistry Hospital. The location and size of the FT in the axial and sagittal planes were evaluated. Descriptive statistics were used to compare the study parameters among age and sex groups. Patients with FT were reevaluated by two maxillofacial surgeons at the study centre.ResultsIn total, 200 images from 400 joints were examined. Unilateral and bilateral FT (19 [9.5%] and 8 [4%], respectively) was detected in 35 (17.5%) images from 27 (13.5%) patients. Examinations were performed for TMJ disorders in 24 patients. Participants with bilateral defects had the highest rates of presence of sounds and ear pain on the left and right sides (p < .05).ConclusionForamen tympanicum can lead to TMJ disorders and spread of tumours or infections from the external auditory canal to the infratemporal fossa. The increased prevalence of such disorders in patients with bilateral FT suggests an association between them.
Reference24 articles.
1. Foramen tympanicum, or foramen of Huschke: pathologic cases and anatomic CT study;Lacout A;AJNR Am. J. Neuroradiol.,2005
2. Evaluation of the frequency of foramen tympanicum (foramen of Huschke) using cone beam computed tomography;Şakır M;Selcuk Dental Journal,2019
3. Examination of foramen tympanicum: an anatomical study using cone-beam computed tomography
4. Foramen tympanicum or foramen of Huschke: a bioarchaeological study on human skeletons from an iron age cemetery at Tabriz Kabud mosque zone;Rezaian J;Iran J Med Sci,2015
5. Anatomic and radiograph study of the persistence of Foramen of Huschke