Otopathology Helps Every Otolaryngologist’s Practice
Our Annual Meeting brings us great educational content, including exceptional named lectures. These were highlighted for our Members in the July Bulletin. While I hope you will attend all of them, I’d like to emphasize one that is linked to a critical issue of which most of us are not aware. The following is edited from a report by Michael M. Paparella, MD, whose eponymous lecture this year is being given by Richard A. Chole, MD, PhD. Don’t miss it! Virtually every hospital in the United States and worldwide has a pathology department for every field in medicine except one: ear diseases (Otology-Neurotology). Whether from OR frozen sections or autopsy studies clinical, surgical, and forensic pathology often represent the best way to understand disease or injury and their causes, helping the physician better understand how to diagnosis and treat. Ear diseases are common in society and in otolaryngology. For example, according to NIH studies nearly 90 million Americans have dizziness and many have incapacitating Meniere’s Disease; 40 million have significant hearing losses and tinnitus. Otitis media occurs in almost every child before age 5 and chronic forms of otitis media with effusion (OME) occur in about 10 percent of children. Furthermore, many have chronic otitis media and chronic mastoiditis characterized by the development of tissue pathology, not fluid. Considering the above, tragically there are only three active temporal bone laboratories in the United States currently receiving and preparing temporal bones for study and research analysis. There should be many more in academic and other centers. The cost to acquire, prepare, and study a single human temporal bone is about $3,000 and requires special expertise and training available only in temporal bone laboratories. For this reason, human temporal bone pathology has become a special and costly, but critical research endeavor. Your Academy has encouraged focus on how human temporal bone pathology research will enhance your ability to diagnose and treat your patients with ear (and other) diseases. In future Bulletin articles you will learn more about otopathology and how important it is to assure a future supported by this critical foundation of research and knowledge. What Can I Do? Be aware of the critical need to resurrect human temporal bone research from its near demise. Be aware of and support the National Human Temporal Bone Registry at Harvard and the three currently active laboratories at Harvard, University of Minnesota and UCLA. Help create other temporal bone facilities in other universities and centers. Educate your congressional delegation of the dire need for NIDCD support for this overlooked critical area of research. Support the blue ribbon Task Force chaired by Dr. Richard A. Chole, professor and chairman at Washington University and Michael J. McKenna, MD, professor at Harvard, developed under the aegis of the Academy with the generous initial funding from Michael M. Paparella, MD, that has created an Otopathology Endowment to help reverse the decline in otopathology. Encourage and recruit a patient with a significant ear condition, disease, or clinical course with good clinical records to bequeath their temporal bones to the National Human Temporal Bone Registry. Thank you for your support and your patients’support including financial pledges either current or in an estate plan. If you or your patients would like to support the AAO-HNSF/ Michael M. Paparella, MD Endowed Grant for Research in Clinical Otopathology, visit www.entnet.org/donate, click on “donate,”and you will be taken to the donation page where this Endowment is listed. Or, you may email Ron Sallerson, senior director of development at rsallerson@entnet.org.
Our Annual Meeting brings us great educational content, including exceptional named lectures. These were highlighted for our Members in the July Bulletin. While I hope you will attend all of them, I’d like to emphasize one that is linked to a critical issue of which most of us are not aware. The following is edited from a report by Michael M. Paparella, MD, whose eponymous lecture this year is being given by Richard A. Chole, MD, PhD. Don’t miss it!
Virtually every hospital in the United States and worldwide has a pathology department for every field in medicine except one: ear diseases (Otology-Neurotology). Whether from OR frozen sections or autopsy studies clinical, surgical, and forensic pathology often represent the best way to understand disease or injury and their causes, helping the physician better understand how to diagnosis and treat.
Ear diseases are common in society and in otolaryngology. For example, according to NIH studies nearly 90 million Americans have dizziness and many have incapacitating Meniere’s Disease; 40 million have significant hearing losses and tinnitus. Otitis media occurs in almost every child before age 5 and chronic forms of otitis media with effusion (OME) occur in about 10 percent of children. Furthermore, many have chronic otitis media and chronic mastoiditis characterized by the development of tissue pathology, not fluid.
Considering the above, tragically there are only three active temporal bone laboratories in the United States currently receiving and preparing temporal bones for study and research analysis. There should be many more in academic and other centers. The cost to acquire, prepare, and study a single human temporal bone is about $3,000 and requires special expertise and training available only in temporal bone laboratories. For this reason, human temporal bone pathology has become a special and costly, but critical research endeavor.
Your Academy has encouraged focus on how human temporal bone pathology research will enhance your ability to diagnose and treat your patients with ear (and other) diseases. In future Bulletin articles you will learn more about otopathology and how important it is to assure a future supported by this critical foundation of research and knowledge.
What Can I Do?
- Be aware of the critical need to resurrect human temporal bone research from its near demise.
- Be aware of and support the National Human Temporal Bone Registry at Harvard and the three currently active laboratories at Harvard, University of Minnesota and UCLA.
- Help create other temporal bone facilities in other universities and centers.
- Educate your congressional delegation of the dire need for NIDCD support for this overlooked critical area of research.
- Support the blue ribbon Task Force chaired by Dr. Richard A. Chole, professor and chairman at Washington University and Michael J. McKenna, MD, professor at Harvard, developed under the aegis of the Academy with the generous initial funding from Michael M. Paparella, MD, that has created an Otopathology Endowment to help reverse the decline in otopathology.
- Encourage and recruit a patient with a significant ear condition, disease, or clinical course with good clinical records to bequeath their temporal bones to the National Human Temporal Bone Registry.
Thank you for your support and your patients’support including financial pledges either current or in an estate plan. If you or your patients would like to support the AAO-HNSF/ Michael M. Paparella, MD Endowed Grant for Research in Clinical Otopathology, visit www.entnet.org/donate, click on “donate,”and you will be taken to the donation page where this Endowment is listed. Or, you may email Ron Sallerson, senior director of development at rsallerson@entnet.org.