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Dive into the research topics where Christof Röösli is active.

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Featured researches published by Christof Röösli.


Laryngoscope | 2013

Quality of Life of Oropharyngeal Cancer Patients With Respect to Treatment Strategy and p16-Positivity

Martina A. Broglie; Alex Soltermann; Sarah R. Haile; Christof Röösli; Gerhard F. Huber; Stephan Schmid; Sandro J. Stoeckli

To assess the quality of life in long‐term survivors with oropharyngeal cancer (OPSCC), compare the results with our historic cohort in relation to the radiation technique, and explore the influence of treatment strategy and p16 expression on quality of life (QoL).


Ear and Hearing | 2012

COMPARISON OF EAR-CANAL REFLECTANCE AND UMBO VELOCITY IN PATIENTS WITH CONDUCTIVE HEARING LOSS: A PRELIMINARY STUDY

Hideko Heidi Nakajima; Dominic V. Pisano; Christof Röösli; Mohamad A. Hamade; Gabrielle R. Merchant; Lorice Mahfoud; Christopher F. Halpin; John J. Rosowski; Saumil N. Merchant

Objective: The goal of the present study was to investigate the clinical utility of measurements of ear-canal reflectance (ECR) in a population of patients with conductive hearing loss in the presence of an intact, healthy tympanic membrane and an aerated middle ear. We also sought to compare the diagnostic accuracy of umbo velocity (VU) measurements and measurements of ECR in the same group of patients. Design: This prospective study comprised 31 adult patients with conductive hearing loss, of which 14 had surgically confirmed stapes fixation due to otosclerosis, 6 had surgically confirmed ossicular discontinuity, and 11 had computed tomography and vestibular evoked myogenic potential confirmed superior semicircular canal dehiscence (SCD). Measurements on all 31 ears included pure-tone audiometry for 0.25 to 8 kHz, ECR for 0.2 to 6 kHz using the Mimosa Acoustics HearID system, and VU for 0.3 to 6 kHz using the HLV-1000 laser Doppler vibrometer (Polytec Inc, Waldbronn, Germany). We analyzed power reflectance |ECR|2 as well as the absorbance level = 10 × log10(1 − |ECR|2). All measurements were made before any surgical intervention. The VU and ECR data were plotted against normative data obtained in a companion study of 58 strictly defined normal ears (Rosowski et al., 2011). Results: Small increases in |ECR|2 at low-to-mid frequencies (400–1000 Hz) were observed in cases with stapes fixation, while narrowband decreases were seen for both SCD and ossicular discontinuity. The SCD and ossicular discontinuity differed in that the SCD had smaller decreases at mid-frequency (∼1000 Hz), whereas ossicular discontinuity had larger decreases at lower frequencies (500–800 Hz). SCD tended to have less air-bone gap at high frequencies (1–4 kHz) compared with stapes fixation and ossicular discontinuity. The |ECR|2 measurements, in conjunction with audiometry, could successfully separate 28 of the 31 cases into the three pathologies. By comparison, VU measurements, in conjunction with audiometry, could successfully separate various pathologies in 29 of 31 cases. Conclusions: The combination of |ECR|2 with audiometry showed clinical utility in the differential diagnosis of conductive hearing loss in the presence of an intact tympanic membrane and an aerated middle ear and seems to be of similar sensitivity and specificity to measurements of VU plus audiometry. Additional research is needed to expand upon these promising preliminary results.


Laryngoscope | 2009

Outcome of patients after treatment for a squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharynx

Christof Röösli; Dominique Christine Tschudi; Gabriela Studer; Julia Braun; Sandro J. Stoeckli

This study evaluates the oncologic outcome with regard to survival and locoregional tumor control in a cohort of patients with oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) treated according to a uniform algorithm.


Otology & Neurotology | 2012

Dysfunction of the cochlea contributing to hearing loss in acoustic neuromas: An underappreciated entity

Christof Röösli; Fred H. Linthicum; Sebahattin Cureoglu; Saumil N. Merchant

Objective Hearing loss is a common symptom in patients with cochleovestibular schwannoma. Clinical and histologic observations have suggested that the hearing loss may be caused by both retrocochlear and cochlear mechanisms. Our goal was to perform a detailed assessment of cochlear pathology in patients with vestibular schwannoma (VS). Study Design Retrospective analysis of temporal bone histopathology. Setting Multi-center study. Material Temporal bones from 32 patients with unilateral, sporadic VS within the internal auditory canal. Main Outcome Measures Sections through the cochleae on the VS side and opposite (control) ear were evaluated for loss of inner and outer hair cells, atrophy of the stria vascularis, loss of cochlear neurons, and presence of endolymphatic hydrops and precipitate within the endolymph or perilymph. Observed pathologies were correlated to nerve of origin, VS volume, and distance of VS from the cochlea. Hearing thresholds also were assessed. Results VS caused significantly more inner and outer hair cell loss, cochlear neuronal loss, precipitate in endolymph and perilymph, and decreased pure tone average, when compared with the opposite ear. Tumor size, distance from the cochlea, and nerve of origin did not correlate with structural changes in the cochlea or the hearing threshold. Conclusion There is significant degeneration of cochlear structures in ears with VS. Cochlear dysfunction may be an important contributor to the hearing loss caused by VS and can explain certain clinically observed phenomena in patients with VS.


Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2011

Bone Conduction Thresholds and Skull Vibration Measured on the Teeth during Stimulation at Different Sites on the Human Head

Tsukasa Ito; Christof Röösli; C.J. Kim; Jae Hoon Sim; Alexander M. Huber; Rudolf Probst

Vibratory auditory stimulation or bone conduction (BC) reaches the inner ear through both osseous and non-osseous structures of the head, but the contribution of the different pathways of BC is still unclear. In this study, BC thresholds in response to stimulation at several different locations including the eye were assessed, while the magnitudes of skull bone vibrations were measured on the front teeth in human subjects with either normal hearing on both sides or unilateral deafness with normal hearing on the other side. The BC thresholds with stimulation at the ipsilateral mastoid and ipsilateral temporal region were lower than the BC thresholds with stimulation at the other sites, as reported by previous works. The lower thresholds with stimulation at the ipsilateral mastoid and ipsilateral temporal region matched higher amplitudes of skull bone vibrations measured on the teeth, but only at frequencies below 1 kHz. With stimulation at the eye, the thresholds were significantly higher than those with stimulation at the bony sites in the frequency range of 0.25–4 kHz. While skull bone vibrations as measured on the teeth during stimulation at the eye were low for low frequencies, significant bone vibrations were measured at 3 and 4 kHz, indicating different pathways for BC for either the soft tissue or bony site stimulation. This finding contradicts a straightforward relationship between vibrations of the skull bones and BC hearing thresholds.


Otology & Neurotology | 2011

The influence of prosthesis diameter in stapes surgery: a meta-analysis and systematic review of the literature.

Roman D. Laske; Christof Röösli; Michail Chatzimichalis; Jae Hoon Sim; Alexander M. Huber

Objective: To analyze the influence of stapes prosthesis diameter on postoperative hearing results after stapedotomy without interposition in otosclerotic patients. Data Sources: PubMed search from 1970 to 2009 using the key words stapedotomy or stapedectomy or otosclerosis or stapesplasty. Study Selection: Inclusion criteria to select articles and patient groups for meta-analysis and statistical analyses were as follows: otosclerosis as diagnosis, clear description of technique and prosthesis size, calibrated stapedotomy, and complete report of functional results. Data Extraction: Five controlled studies were found analyzing the influence of prosthesis diameter and reporting the results in a comparable way for meta-analysis (n = 590). Sixty-two studies not analyzing the influence of prosthesis diameter contained comparable subgroups with a total of 9,536 cases. These cases were pooled according to their diameter (0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6,and 0.8 mm). The results of air conduction, bone conduction, air-bone gap (ABG), and success rate (closure of the ABG within 10 dB as percentage of the total cases) for all groups and frequency-specific ABG results were gathered. Furthermore, 12 clinical and experimental studies were reviewed that did not contribute to the statistical analysis. Data Synthesis: A meta-analysis performed for success rate of the 5 controlled studies showed favorable results for 0.6-mm over 0.4-mm prostheses (success rate, 67% versus 58%, p = 0.05). In the statistical analysis of the pooled data, the 0.6-mm prosthesis showed better results compared with 0.4 mm (p < 0.001) in the postoperative air conduction threshold (29 dB versus 35 dB), postoperative ABG (7 dB versus 11 dB), ABG improvement (25 dB versus 21 dB), and success rate (81.1% versus 75.1%). The frequency-specific analysis of the postoperative ABG showed no advantage for the small prosthesis in the high frequencies. There was no difference in postoperative change of bone conduction in the 0.6- and 0.4-mm groups. Statistically significant results could not be assessed for other prosthesis diameters because of the small number of cases reported. Conclusion: A 0.6-mm diameter piston prosthesis is associated with significantly better results than a 0.4-mm prosthesis and should be used if the surgical conditions allow it.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2009

Salvage treatment for recurrent oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma

Christof Röösli; Gabriela Studer; Sandro J. Stoeckli

This study evaluates the oncological outcome of patients with recurrent oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) after primary radiation therapy ± chemotherapy, primary surgical therapy, and surgical therapy followed by radiation therapy ± chemotherapy.


Ear and Hearing | 2012

Objective assessment of stapedotomy surgery from round window motion measurement.

Jae Hoon Sim; Michail Chatzimichalis; Christof Röösli; Roman D. Laske; Alexander M. Huber

Objectives: As prostheses and techniques related to stapes surgery develop and improve, there is a need to assess the functional outcomes of the surgery objectively. This study provides a bench test method to assess the functional results of stapes surgery by measuring volume displacement at the round window (RW), which is closely related to pressure propagation of the travelling wave inside the cochlea and thus to hearing. Design: Motion of the RW membrane in fresh temporal bones was measured using a scanning laser Doppler interferometry system for normal and reconstructed conditions, and the performance of the reconstruction with stapes surgery was quantitatively assessed by comparison of the volume displacements at the RW between the two conditions. To obtain optimal measurements, reflectivity of the laser beam of the scanning laser Doppler interferometry system was improved by retroreflective beads coated onto the surface of the RW, and orientation of the RW membrane relative to the laser beam was obtained using micro-computed tomography imaging. Results: From measurements in 12 temporal bones, difference in the RW volume displacement between normal ears and ears reconstructed with stapes surgery was approximately 15 dB below 2 kHz and approximately 10 dB above 4 kHz, which was comparable with air–bone gaps in patients after stapes surgery. Two different sizes of the stapes prostheses were also tested (n = 3), and a tendency toward a better outcome with a larger diameter was found. Conclusion: The method developed in this study can be used to assess various prostheses and surgical conditions objectively in controlled laboratory environments. It may also have potential for providing ways to assess other middle- and inner-ear surgeries, and to study other aspects of hearing science.


Otology & Neurotology | 2011

Biocompatibility of Nitinol Stapes Prosthesis

Christof Röösli; Philipp Schmid; Alexander M. Huber

Objective: Use of the SMart piston, a nitinol-based, self-crimping prosthesis in stapes surgery may allow improved functional results because of better sound transmission properties at the incus-prosthesis interface because of the elimination of manual crimping. Possible disadvantages include thermal damage or strangulation of the incus and its mucoperiosteum or nickel intolerance. The goal of this study was to morphologically assess the fixation of this prosthesis to the incus, investigate the reaction of the middle ear mucosa to the prosthesis, identify alterations to the incudal bone, and detect deposits of nickel in the tissue around the prosthesis. Study Design: Prospective consecutive case analysis. Setting: Tertiary referral center. Patients: Four patients with an unfavorable functional result after primary SMart-piston stapedotomy. Intervention: Revision malleostapedotomy with explantation of the incus and prosthesis for further analysis. Main Outcome Measures: Analysis of intraoperative findings and postoperative examination of the explants using light- and scanning-electron microscopy, energy dispersive x-ray analysis, and atom absorption spectrometry. Results: The intraoperative, macroscopic, and scanning electron microscopic investigation showed tight circular fixation of the prostheses, whereas a gap between the prosthesis and the lateral incus was found in 1 case. All prostheses were overgrown by mucosa. Superficial localized erosion of the incudal bone was found in 2 cases. There was no elevation in nickel content in the removed tissue samples. Conclusion: The lateral gap between prosthesis and incus did not affect fixation of the prosthesis, neither did covering by a mucosal layer. Bone erosion was most likely caused by laser in one and by the prosthesis in another explant. No signs of increased nickel deposits could be found on energy dispersive x-ray analysis or atom absorption spectrometry. We conclude that a nitinol stapes prosthesis is safe for treatment of stapedial fixation.


Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2012

What is the site of origin of cochleovestibular schwannomas

Christof Röösli; Fred H. Linthicum; Sebahattin Cureoglu; Saumil N. Merchant

The belief that cochleovestibular schwannomas arise from the glial-Schwann cell junction has repeatedly been quoted in the literature, although there is no published evidence that supports this statement. A systematic evaluation of the nerve of origin and the precise location of cochleovestibular schwannomas using our respective archival temporal bone collections was conducted. Forty tumors were within the internal auditory canal (IAC), while 10 were intralabyrinthine neoplasms. Of the 40 IAC schwannomas, 4 arose from the cochlear nerve, and 36 from the vestibular nerve. Twenty-one tumors clearly arose lateral to the glial-Schwann cell junction, while 16 tumors filled at least two thirds of the IAC, with the epicenter of the neoplasm located in the mid part or the lateral part of the IAC. Only 3 schwannomas were located in the medial one third of the IAC in the area of the glial-Schwann cell junction. We concluded that cochleovestibular schwannomas may arise anywhere along the course of the axons of the eighth cranial nerve from the glial-Schwann sheath junction up until their terminations within the auditory and vestibular end organs.

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Ivo Dobrev

Worcester Polytechnic Institute

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John J. Rosowski

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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