Lafferty David J, Cohn Jason E, McKinnon Brian J
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA; Department of Pediatric Otolaryngology, St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA; Department of Pediatric Otolaryngology, St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2020 Jan;128:109688. doi: 10.1016/j.ijporl.2019.109688. Epub 2019 Sep 19.
Incidental mastoid opacification (IMO) is a common radiologic finding and source of referral to otolaryngologists. Our objectives were to: 1) determine the rate of IMO in our pediatric population; 2) identify those with clinical mastoiditis; and 3) identify factors necessitating an otolaryngology consultation.
This was a retrospective chart review at an academic, tertiary, pediatric hospital in an urban setting. Pediatric patients with the keyword 'mastoid' on a computed tomography (CT) scan report were reviewed. The effect of age, gender, season and the use of contrast media on the rate of IMO was also analyzed. Chi-square analysis was used to compare the significance of categorical frequencies.
The rate of IMO in our cohort was 14.2% (164/1157). In children <8 years of age, the IMO rate was 22.0% compared to 5.6% in children 8-17 years of age (p < .001). The IMO rate in male children was 16.6% compared to 11.0% in female children (p = .007). There was no statistically significant higher rate of IMO during winter (15.1%) compared to summer (9.0%) and in CT scans with contrast (16.0%) compared to without contrast (14.0%). Our department of otolaryngology was formally consulted in 3% (5/164) of IMO cases. None of those patients had clinical mastoiditis.
This is the largest study identifying IMO on CT and in children to date. Although the overall rate of IMO in the pediatric population is 14.2%, it is rarely clinically significant.
偶然发现的乳突气房混浊(IMO)是一种常见的影像学表现,也是转诊至耳鼻喉科医生处的常见原因。我们的目的是:1)确定我们儿科人群中IMO的发生率;2)识别患有临床乳突炎的患者;3)识别需要耳鼻喉科会诊的因素。
这是一项在城市地区的学术性三级儿科医院进行的回顾性病历审查。对计算机断层扫描(CT)扫描报告中有关键词“乳突”的儿科患者进行了审查。还分析了年龄、性别、季节和使用造影剂对IMO发生率的影响。采用卡方分析比较分类频率的显著性。
我们队列中IMO的发生率为14.2%(164/1157)。8岁以下儿童的IMO发生率为22.0%,而8至17岁儿童为5.6%(p<0.001)。男童的IMO发生率为16.6%,女童为11.0%(p = 0.007)。与夏季(9.0%)相比,冬季(15.1%)的IMO发生率无统计学显著升高,与未使用造影剂的CT扫描(14.0%)相比,使用造影剂的CT扫描(16.0%)的IMO发生率也无统计学显著升高。在164例IMO病例中,有3%(5/164)的病例正式咨询了我们的耳鼻喉科。这些患者均无临床乳突炎。
这是迄今为止在CT上识别IMO并针对儿童进行的最大规模研究。尽管儿科人群中IMO的总体发生率为14.2%,但临床上很少具有显著意义。