Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Apr 2023)

Atypical Skull-Base Osteomyelitis: Comprehensive Review and Multidisciplinary Management Viewpoints

  • Jure Urbančič,
  • Domen Vozel,
  • Saba Battelino,
  • Roman Bošnjak,
  • Barbara Kokošar Ulčar,
  • Tadeja Matos,
  • Matic Munda,
  • Lea Papst,
  • Nejc Steiner,
  • Matej Vouk,
  • Nina Zidar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8050254
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. 254

Abstract

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Atypical skull-base osteomyelitis is a rare but fatal disease that usually involves infection of the ethmoid, sphenoid, occipital, or temporal bones that form the skull base. Unlike typical (so-called otogenic), atypical skull-base osteomyelitis has no otogenic cause. Instead, some authors call atypical skull-base osteomyelitis sinonasal, since the infection most often originates from the nose and paranasal sinuses. Diagnosing and treating this disease is challenging. To assist in managing atypical skull-base osteomyelitis, a review of the most recent literature, with patient cases and multidisciplinary perspectives from otolaryngologists, neurosurgeons, radiologists, infectious disease specialists, pathologists, and clinical microbiologists, is provided in this paper.

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