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Taste Disorders in Middle Ear Disease and After Middle Ear Surgery

Taste Disorders in Middle Ear Disease and After Middle Ear Surgery

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01584011
Enrollment
310
Registered
2012-04-24
Start date
2010-01-31
Completion date
Unknown
Last updated
2012-05-08

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Taste Disturbance

Keywords

Taste, Chorda tympani nerve

Brief summary

Objectives To evaluate the impact of taste disturbance in different types of chronic middle ear diseases and after middle ear surgery. Hypothesis That patients with chronic otitis media and cholesteatoma has taste disturbance already before surgery due to the disease itself, of course depending on degree of the disease. That patients with otosclerosis, has a normal nerve function before surgery. That patients with normal taste before surgery are more likely to notices a taste disturbance. That nerve in continuity after surgery, even if it is maltreated, gives less taste disturbance than a divided nerve. Methods A clinical study has been launched that measures taste function with two different methods for taste measurements, electrogustometry (EGM) and the filter paper disc method (FPD) before and after middle ear surgery in patients operated with middle ear surgery because of otosclerosis, chronic otitis media and cholesteatoma. The investigators plan to include 120 patients in this study. A parallel study of the patients own experience of the symptom has also been launched were the patients answer a questionary and a quality of life document. The investigators plan to include 300 patients in this study. A histological study where specimens of CTN from healthy ears and from ears with chronic disease will be investigated with electron microscopy has also started.

Detailed description

Taste sensations are provided by three different nerves of which the chorda tympani nerve (CTN) is the major taste nerve. It innervates taste buds in the two anterior thirds of the tongue. The CTN location in the middle ear predisposes for trauma of the nerve. In various forms of middle ear pathology, such as chronic otitis and cholesteatoma the nerve can be affected by the pathologic process per se, since the nerve may become exposed to bacteria toxins, enzymes or mechanical damage. During middle ear surgery, it can be cut off, stretched, touched or dried out by the heat of the microscope light beam. The nerve function in these situations is not clarified. Is it for example better to cut the nerve than to leave it traumatized after surgery. Therefore previous reports on objective CTN function pre- and postoperatively unfortunate suffer from inadequate descriptions of ear disease that were studied. In order to elucidate these questions and to give the surgeon deeper knowledge about how to handle CTN during surgery a prospective study is initiated on patients to be operated on with primary middle ear surgery. We believe that patients with chronic otitis media and cholesteatoma has taste disturbance already before surgery due to the disease itself, of course depending on degree of the disease, and that patients with otosclerosis has a normal nerve function before surgery. We also believe that patients with normal taste before surgery are more likely to notice a taste disturbance and that a nerve in continuity after surgery, even if it is maltreated, gives less taste disturbance than a divided nerve. Two methods of taste measuring are used in the study, Electrogustometry (EGM) and a Filter Paper Disc method (FPD). We have evaluated EGM regarding possible bias and artifacts as well as the correlation regarding results from the two methods. The study contains three substudies or arms. 1. A clinical prospective trial where 100 patients that undergoes primary middle ear surgery because of chronic otitis, cholesteatoma or otosclerosis are evaluated with EGM and FPD before and after surgery. They also answer a questionnaire about subjective taste disturbance and a questionnaire about quality of life. 2. A clinical multi center study on 200 patients that undergoes primary surgery because of otosclerosis. These patients answer a questionnaire about subjective taste disturbance and a questionnaire about quality of life. 3. A histological study with electron microscopy of CTN from healthy ears and from ears whit chronic otitis or cholesteatoma. We we plan to investigate samples from five healthy and from five sick ears with EM.

Interventions

OTHERtaste measurement

Taste measurements with Electrogustometry and Filter paper test before and after surgery until one year after surgery

Answering a symptom questionnaire before and after surgery until one year after surgery

BEHAVIORALQuality of life questionnaire

Answering a quality of life questionnaire before and one year after surgery

OTHERNerve sample

Collect nerve samples from patients undergoing surgery because of vestibular schwannoma, chronic otitis media or cholesteatoma where the nerve cant be saved during planned operation.

Sponsors

Uppsala University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients that undergoes primary middle ear surgery due to chronic otitis media, cholesteatoma and otosclerosis

Exclusion criteria

* Not primary surgery * Not able to participate

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Taste disturbanceOne year postoperativeTaste disturbance postoperative will be measured with electrogustometry, filter paper disc methode and symptom questionnaire before surgery and at four times after surgery up till one year poatoperative.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Quality of lifeone yearA quality of life evaluation will be performed before surgery and one year after surgery.
Histopathological changesAt the time of surgeryElectron microscopy investigation of specimen from healthy ears and from ears with chronic otitis media or cholesteatoma were the nerve could not be saved during the operation.

Countries

Sweden

Contacts

Primary ContactKatarina Berling, MD
katarina.berling@spray.se+46735303045
Backup ContactMagnus vonUnge, PhD, Professor
magnusvu@hotmail.com+46733849463

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026