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  1. Selvamalar V, Othman NAN, Daud MK
    Acta Medica (Hradec Kralove), 2021;64(1):36-41.
    PMID: 33855957 DOI: 10.14712/18059694.2021.6
    Malignant otitis externa is an inflammation of the external auditory canal with preceding osteomyelitis of the temporal bone and the adjacent structures that could be potentially lethal. Malignant otitis externa may present with cranial nerve involvements and massive spread of disease mimicking nasopharyngeal carcinoma or any other malignancies on imaging. Two elderly patients who presented with severe otalgia and significant facial nerve palsy and lower cranial nerve palsies showing extensive spread of disease are reported in this case series. They both had resolution of disease after a prolonged course of antibiotics and cortical mastoidectomy for disease clearance in one of them.
  2. Krishnamoorthy M, Othman NAN, Hassan NEB, Hitam SB
    Acta Medica (Hradec Kralove), 2020;63(2):82-85.
    PMID: 32771074 DOI: 10.14712/18059694.2020.22
    Skull base osteomyelitis (SBO) also commonly known as malignant otitis externa was first described by Meltzer and Kelemen in 1959. Prior to the advent of the antibiotic era, this disease carried a poor prognosis with significant morbidity. It often proved fatal with mortality rates as high as 50%. Commonly seen in the immunocompromised patients, diabetes mellitus is an important associated comorbidity in the pathophysiologic development of this disease. Treatment is instituted by medical therapy with surgery having a limited role. Surgical intervention has a limited role, for example, in fungal SBO. Such cases may require local debridement and intraoperative tissue biopsies for histopathologic confirmation. This is to demonstrate fungal invasion into the skull base, as well as to exclude other sinister differential diagnoses like squamous cell carcinoma of temporal bone. In this case report, we present a rare case of candida SBO and the literature review.
  3. Rashid KNA, Zainon IH, Othman NAN
    Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg, 2024 Feb;76(1):1244-1246.
    PMID: 38440449 DOI: 10.1007/s12070-023-04241-y
    Inverted follicular keratosis is a benign skin lesion that typically presents as an asymptomatic, solitary nodule that may mimic malignant lesions, especially squamous cell carcinoma, both clinically and pathologically. It is developed from the hair follicle infundibulum and can be considered a variant of seborrheic dermatitis. We present a case of a 26-year-old gentleman with a soft tissue mass at the external auditory canal which was later confirmed as inverted follicular keratosis and was treated by endoscopic transcanal excision of the mass with temporalis fascia graft reconstruction. He is currently under surveillance follow-up with no symptoms and signs of recurrence.
  4. Sim L, Othman NAN, Hoe KC, Saad MSM
    Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg, 2022 Dec;74(Suppl 3):3819-3823.
    PMID: 36742613 DOI: 10.1007/s12070-021-02662-1
    Facial nerve palsy is one of the complications of temporal bone fracture. Several approaches can be used for facial nerve decompression which include the middle cranial fossa approach, transmastoid approach and translabyrinthine approach. When the site of injury is identified at the tympanic segment and perigeniculate area, total transcanal endoscopic approach (TTEA) is an excellent surgical option. This approach is safe and less invasive avoiding external incision and mastoid drilling. Our patient showed recovery to House-Brackmann grade II facial function and reduction of the air-bone gap 6 months after the surgery.
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