- Otomastoiditis is inflammation and infection involving both the middle ear (otitis media) and mastoid air cells.
- The mastoid process communicates with the middle ear through the aditus ad antrum, allowing spread of infection.
Etiopathogenesis
- Acute otitis media → spreads into mastoid air cells → acute mastoiditis.
- Chronic otitis media (with or without cholesteatoma) → causes chronic mastoiditis with sclerosis.
- Pathogens: Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis (in children); Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus aureus in chronic disease.
Clinical Features
- Ear pain, fever, otorrhea, conductive hearing loss.
- Postauricular swelling, erythema, tenderness.
- Protruding auricle in acute mastoiditis.
Complications:
- Extracranial: subperiosteal abscess, Bezold’s abscess, petrositis, facial nerve palsy.
- Intracranial: sigmoid sinus thrombosis, meningitis, extradural/brain abscess.
Radiological Features
HRCT temporal bone:
| Acute otomastoiditis | • Opacification of middle ear + mastoid air cells.
• Clouding of mastoid without bony sclerosis.
• Possible coalescent mastoiditis: destruction of mastoid septae and cortex, abscess formation |
| --- | --- |
| Chronic otomastoiditis | • Sclerotic, poorly pneumatized mastoid (reactive bone).
• Thickened mucosa, granulation tissue ± cholesteatoma.
• Erosion of ossicles, scutum, tegmen, posterior canal wall in cholesteatomatous disease |
Management