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CASE REPORT
An unusual case of dysphasia and seizures
  1. Mark Robert Williams1,
  2. Anne Easson2,
  3. Sadie Khwaja1,
  4. Will Aucott3
  1. 1Department of ENT, Stepping Hill Hospital, Stockport, Cheshire, UK
  2. 2Department of Audiovestibular Medicine, Central Manchester University Hospitals, Manchester, UK
  3. 3Department of ENT, Blackpool Victoria Hospital, Blackpool, UK
  1. Correspondence to Will Aucott, waucott{at}yahoo.com

Summary

Defects in the tegmen tympani can have serious consequences such as intracranial infection and seizures, however, they can be difficult to diagnose due to their subtlety on cross-sectional imaging and the non-specific way in which they can present. Repair of such defects can be undertaken via a middle fossa or transmastoid approach; both, however, usually necessitate a general anaesthetic and, furthermore, middle cranial fossa surgery carries the risk of epilepsy while transmastoid repair can result in the loss of hearing. We present a novel method of repair in a patient who would otherwise have been managed conservatively.

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