Learning curve for Piezosurgery in well-trained otological surgeons

Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2010 Jan;142(1):120-5. doi: 10.1016/j.otohns.2009.10.013.

Abstract

Objective: Piezosurgery is an ultrasound instrument (24.7-29.5 kHz) capable of cutting bone without necrosis and nonmineralized tissue damage. The aim of this work has been to determine the time required for a well-trained surgeon to perform otological surgery with the piezoelectric device.

Study design: Case series with planned data collection. Sixty-three patients affected by otosclerosis and 63 by chronic otitis media were enrolled. For each disease, patients were divided into three numerically equal groups, with each group assigned to a well-trained otological surgeon. Patients underwent stapedotomy (n = 63) and intact canal wall tympanoplasty (n = 63) with the piezoelectric device.

Setting: ENT Department, University of Genoa (Italy).

Subjects and methods: We recorded "skin-to-skin" operation time, surgical success, surgical complication, and hospital stay duration. Before and one year after surgery, all patients underwent pure-tone audiometry, tympanometry, recording of transient-evoked otoacoustic emission, recording of distortion product otoacoustic emission, auditory brainstem response, and electronystamographic recording.

Results: In each surgical technique, the piezoelectric device provided excellent control without side effects on the adjacent structures of the middle and inner ear.

Conclusion: The piezoelectric device is a new bony scalpel that uses microvibrations at ultrasonic frequency so that soft tissue (nerve, vessel, dura mater, etc) will not be damaged even on accidental contact with the cutting tip. A feature of the piezoelectric device is its good manageability, which makes it easy for a well-trained otological surgeon to create a straight osteotomy line without any learning period: this renders the piezoelectric device suitable for bone surgery.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Equipment Design
  • Humans
  • Otitis Media / surgery*
  • Otosclerosis / surgery*
  • Time Factors
  • Ultrasonic Therapy / instrumentation