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Publications (12)10.12 Total impact

  • Article: Frequency and localization of congenital anomalies of the middle and inner ears: a human temporal bone histopathological study.
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    ABSTRACT: This study investigated congenital anomalies occurring in the middle and the inner ears, with particular attention to their features, localizations, and frequencies. One hundred human temporal bones obtained from 73 individuals, aged 31 gestational weeks to 39 years, each of whom had anomalies of the middle ear and/or inner ear, were used for this study. The temporal bones had been removed at autopsy, fixed, dehydrated, embedded in celloidin, and sectioned horizontally or vertically at 20 microns. Every 10th horizontal section or every 20th vertical section was stained with hematoxylin and eosin, mounted and studied under a light microscope. In the middle ear the structure most often found to be anomalous was the facial nerve; in the inner ear it was the lateral semicircular canal. The implications of the anomalies observed are discussed as they relate to fetal development, dysfunction of the ear, and clinical interpretation of diagnostic radiological studies.
    International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology 11/1988; 16(1):1-22. · 1.17 Impact Factor
  • Article: Congenital middle and inner ear anomalies.
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    ABSTRACT: For this study, 100 human temporal bones from 73 individuals, aged 31 gestational weeks to 39 years, each with anomalies of the middle and/or inner ear, were studied to identify the features, locations, and frequencies with which congenital anomalies occurred in these structures. The temporal bones had been removed at autopsy, fixed, dehydrated, embedded in celloidin, sectioned horizontally or vertically at 20 microns, stained with hematoxylin and eosin, and studied under a light microscope. The anomaly in the middle ear most often found was wide dehiscence of the facial canal; hypoplastic cochlea was most frequently observed anomaly in the inner ear. The implications of these findings for development of the ear during fetal life are discussed.
    Acta oto-laryngologica. Supplementum 02/1988; 458:76-8.
  • Article: Mesenchyme remaining in human temporal bones.
    T Takahara, I Sando, Y Hashida, Y Shibahara
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    ABSTRACT: This study was conducted in order to gain basic information about mesenchyme remaining in the middle ear cleft in normal infants. Because no previous report has objectively described the quantity or quality of such postnatal remnants in normal infants, it has not been possible to accurately evaluate the significance of mesenchyme remaining in the middle ears of infants with pathologic conditions, such as otitis media and congenital anomalies. Thus, 53 temporal bones obtained from 41 individuals reported upon here--from 26 weeks' gestation to 8 years of age--will be controls for future studies of pathologic conditions. The children from whom these temporal bones were obtained had no anomalies of the ear (or any other known part of the body); nor did they have any pathologic conditions in the ear. The temporal bones were prepared for histologic study with hematoxylin and eosin staining and were examined under the light microscope. After areas of the mesenchyme in the histologic sections were projected and illustrated for each of 19 portions in the middle ear cleft under the microprojector, those areas were measured by compensating polar planimetry. The findings obtained in this study were as follows: The amount of mesenchyme remaining in the days after birth seemed to gradually decrease in volume with increased maturity and had nearly disappeared within the first year in normal infants. Where mesenchyme was noted in the temporal bones of infants over 1 year of age, it was usually present only in small niches.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
    Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 11/1986; 95(3 Pt 1):349-57. · 1.72 Impact Factor
  • Article: How to remove, process, and study the temporal bone with the entire eustachian tube and its accessory structures: a method for histopathological study.
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    ABSTRACT: A very important contribution to the study of otitis media, one of the diseases most often seen in pediatric patients, is the collection and study of temporal bone specimens which include the entire Eustachian tube. During the last few years, we have collected, processed, and studied more than 100 such specimens. Through these experiences, our technique has become so refined that we have some important suggestions to make to otologists who are interested in the histological study of otitis media as well as in the pathology of the Eustachian tube and its relation to middle ear abnormalities. This report describes the method we have found to be most successful for the study of Eustachian tube abnormalities and their relationship to middle ear effusion.
    Auris Nasus Larynx 02/1985; 12 Suppl 1:S21-5. · 0.76 Impact Factor
  • Article: Postnatal development of the eustachian tube and its surrounding structures--a preliminary study.
    M Kitajiri, I Sando, T Takahara
    Auris Nasus Larynx 02/1985; 12 Suppl 1:S163-5. · 0.76 Impact Factor
  • Article: The common site for otitis media in human temporal bones--a quantitative histopathological study.
    T Takahara, I Sando
    Auris Nasus Larynx 02/1985; 12 Suppl 1:S173-6. · 0.76 Impact Factor
  • Article: Metastatic squamous cell carcinoma in the neck invading the facial canal--a case report.
    M Kitajiri, I Sando, T Takahara, M Klau
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    ABSTRACT: The results of histopathologic examination of the temporal bone of a 71-year-old woman with squamous cell carcinoma of the tonsil and ipsilateral facial palsy are presented. The right temporal bone was directly involved by metastatic spread of the primary lesion to the right upper cervical lymph nodes. Tumor cells had invaded the canal of the facial nerve, the chorda tympani nerve, and the stapedius muscle, as well as the air cells in the mastoid region. However, although tumor cells had infiltrated the facial canal to a considerable distance from the metastatic tumor mass, the facial nerve had not been infiltrated. Slight degeneration of the facial nerve, however, was observed and appeared to have been caused by compression by the tumor.
    Auris Nasus Larynx 02/1984; 11(3):171-6. · 0.76 Impact Factor
  • Article: Congenital anomalies of the inner ear.
    I Sando, T Takahara, A Ogawa
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    ABSTRACT: This study investigated congenital anomalies occurring in the inner ear, with particular attention to their features, localizations, and frequencies. Seventy-seven human temporal bones obtained from 53 individuals, aged one day to 39 years, each of whom had anomalies of the external ear, middle ear, and/or inner ear, were used for this study. The temporal bones had been removed at autopsy, fixed, dehydrated, embedded in celloidin, and sectioned horizontally or vertically at 20 microns. Every tenth horizontal section or every 20th vertical section was stained with hematoxylin and eosin, mounted, and studied under a light microscope. There were 206 inner ear anomalies (117 in the vestibular system, 79 in the cochlea, 10 in the internal auditory meatus) in the 51 bones studied. Fifty-four different features of anomalies were present at 33 different locations in the inner ear. The most frequent anomalies observed were shortened cochlea (23 bones), enlarged vestibule (17 bones), wide cochlear aqueduct (16 bones), absence of lateral semicircular canal (14 bones), and large osseous lateral semicircular canal (10 bones). The most common site of inner ear anomalies was thus the lateral semicircular canal, which was involved in 46 of the 206 anomalies observed; the anomalies in this organ were variable in type. The implications of inner ear anomalies are discussed as they relate to fetal development, inner ear dysfunction, and clinical interpretation of polytomographic studies.
    The Annals of otology, rhinology & laryngology. Supplement 112:110-8.
  • Article: Postnatal development of the eustachian tube and its surrounding structures. Preliminary study.
    M Kitajiri, I Sando, T Takahara
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    ABSTRACT: The postnatal development of the eustachian tube and its surrounding structures (tubal cartilage, tubal gland, tensor veli palatini muscle, and levator veli palatini muscle) was investigated in serial vertical histologic sections from 12 normal temporal bones of individuals whose ages ranged from 39 weeks' gestation to 19 years of age. After projecting tissue sections onto paper and tracing the structures, several measurements were made in order to analyze this development. Findings revealed that the eustachian tube and its accessory structures developed postnatally up to the age of 19 years. The lumen area in a 19-year-old specimen was 4.7 times that of the 1-day-old infant. The development of the tube was greatest in the pharyngeal part. Postnatal development of the eustachian tube appears to be related to growth of the face. The cartilage area in the 19-year-old specimen was 3.6 times that of the 1-day-old infant. The mucosal acinar cells were predominant in infants but no greater than the number of serous acinar cells by the age of 19 years. The areas of the tensor and levator veli palatini muscles in a 19-year-old specimen were 5.1 and 11.1 times, respectively, those of the 1-day-old infant. This preliminary study reports the postnatal development of the eustachian tube and its accessory structures, a subject never thoroughly investigated to date. However, because of the limited number of cases available, further investigation of a greater number of cases should be performed so that the relationship between tubal development and alterations in function that occur with age can be understood clearly.
    The Annals of otology, rhinology, and laryngology 96(2 Pt 1):191-8. · 1.05 Impact Factor
  • Article: Lymphoma invading the anterior eustachian tube. Temporal bone histopathology of functional tubal obstruction.
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    ABSTRACT: The temporal bones of a man with poorly differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma, who had had a bilateral conductive hearing loss and incomplete left-sided facial palsy, were obtained. Sections were prepared for histologic study by staining with hematoxylin and eosin and were examined under the light microscope. The left temporal bone showed marked tumor cell involvement, not only of the lateral part of the cartilaginous portion of the eustachian tube (ET) where the tensor veli palatini muscle had been partially destroyed, but also in the anterior part of the temporal bone. A serous middle ear effusion was present, but the lumen of the ET was unaffected by tumor or inflammation. The pathological findings in the right temporal bone were similar to those in the left, although the cartilaginous part of the ET and its surrounding structures were not available for study. The pathogenesis of otitis media with effusion appeared to be secondary to functional ET obstruction, due to the dysfunction of the tensor veli palatini muscle as a result of the tumor destruction. This case is the first to be reported in which functional ET obstruction, secondary to tumor invasion of the active muscle dilator of the ET, has been histologically confirmed.
    The Annals of otology, rhinology, and laryngology 95(1 Pt 1):101-5. · 1.05 Impact Factor
  • Article: A method for the histopathological analysis of the temporal bone and the eustachian tube and its accessory structures.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: A very important contribution to the study of otitis media, one of the diseases most often seen in pediatric patients, is the collection, processing, and study of the specimens of the temporal bone and the entire eustachian tube. During the last few years, we have collected, processed, and studied 100 such specimens, and through these experiences our technique has become refined. We now have some important suggestions for otologists interested in the histological study of otitis media as well as in the pathology of the eustachian tube and its relation to middle ear abnormalities. This report details the most successful method for the study of eustachian tube abnormalities and their relationship to middle ear effusion.
    The Annals of otology, rhinology, and laryngology 95(3 Pt 1):267-74. · 1.05 Impact Factor
  • Article: Mesenchyme remaining in temporal bones from patients with congenital anomalies. A quantitative histopathologic study.
    T Takahara, I Sando
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    ABSTRACT: Our hypothesis that more mesenchyme remains for a longer time in the middle ear clefts of infants with congenital anomalies in the ear and/or other parts of the body than in the ears of infants without such anomalies has been tested. One hundred four human temporal bones obtained from 81 individuals with congenital anomalies in the ear and/or other parts of the body, with ages ranging from 24 weeks' gestation to 35 years, were processed histologically, stained with H & E, and examined under the light microscope. The slides were projected under a microprojector, and the mesenchyme remaining in each of 19 portions of the middle ear cleft was measured by compensating polar planimetry and expressed as a percentage of the total potential middle ear space in that histologic section. By comparing the findings in the present study with those of a previous study in which mesenchyme remaining in ears from normal age-matched controls was measured, we found that more mesenchyme remained for a longer time in the middle ear cavities of infants with congenital anomalies than in those of control infants (p less than .01). In addition, the amount of mesenchyme remaining was in direct proportion to the degree to which development of the middle ear was anomalous.
    The Annals of otology, rhinology, and laryngology 96(3 Pt 1):333-9. · 1.05 Impact Factor