Ikarashi F, Nakano Y, Okura T
Department of Otolaryngology, Nippon Dental University School of Dentistry, Niigata, Japan.
Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol. 1996 Oct;105(10):784-90. doi: 10.1177/000348949610501005.
To examine whether gas exchange occurs in the middle ear air cell system independent of the eustachian tube (ET), we occluded the middle ear clefts of piglets, whose tympanic bullae closely resemble the human mastoid air cell system, and investigated subsequent changes in the air cell system. We anticipated that pneumatization and development of the air cell system would continue if gas were exchanged through the mucosa lining the air cell system. If, on the other hand, mastoid air cells depend on the ET, mastoid development would be impaired or arrested. In noninflamed ears, pneumatization was maintained, and development of the air cell system continued after the middle ear cleft had been occluded with an acrylate adhesive and the bullar air cell system was thus excluded from any communication with the ET. These results indicate that the normal middle ear air cell system has the capacity to perform gas exchange independently of the ET, with gas exchange appearing to occur through the submucosal capillary network.