Overview
A cholesteatoma is an abnormal, non-neoplastic accumulation of keratinizing stratified squamous epithelium and desquamated keratin debris within the middle ear, mastoid, or other pneumatized regions of the temporal bone. Although benign in the histological sense, it behaves locally aggressively because the trapped epithelial sac expands, erodes adjacent bone, and incites chronic inflammation. Cholesteatomas are classified as congenital, arising from embryonic epithelial rests behind an intact tympanic membrane, or acquired, the more common form, which develops from tympanic membrane retraction pockets, perforation, or epithelial migration, frequently in the setting of chronic otitis media and eustachian tube dysfunction. Progressive enlargement and the release of osteolytic mediators lead to destruction of the ossicular chain, the bony labyrinth, the facial nerve canal, and the tegmen, producing conductive or mixed hearing loss, recurrent foul otorrhea, vertigo, facial nerve weakness, and, in advanced cases, intracranial complications such as meningitis or abscess. Diagnosis relies on otoscopic and microscopic examination, audiometry, and imaging, with high-resolution computed tomography defining bony erosion and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging aiding detection and surveillance. The definitive treatment is surgical, typically tympanomastoidectomy to eradicate the disease and prevent recurrence, often combined with reconstruction of the tympanic membrane and ossicular chain to restore hearing.
Research published in this journal
5 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Role of Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Diagnosis of Cholesteatoma
A Comparative Study of Temporalis Fascia Graft and Cartilage - Perichondrium Graft in Tympanoplasty
Late Onset Meningitis in Post Traumatic Temporal Meningoencephalocele
Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma of External Auditory Canal – Uncommon Location and Related Risk Factors
How this research is being cited
The 5 articles above have been cited 6 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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2022 · Journal of Surgical Case Reports
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2022 · Journal of Surgical Case Reports
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2021 · BMJ Case Reports
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2021 · BMJ Case Reports
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Yuli Tetriana Sari et al. · 2019 ·
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2017 · Journal of Otolaryngology Advances
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Cholesteatoma, linking to each citing work.