Correct Answer: D. All of the above
Keratosis obturans is a benign condition of the external auditory canal characterized by accumulation of desquamated epithelium and keratin debris. The pathophysiology involves failure of normal epithelial migration along the posterior meatal wall, which is the primary mechanism—epithelium normally migrates laterally from the tympanic membrane, and obstruction of this process leads to impaction. The condition presents with conductive hearing loss, aural fullness, and otorrhea. Importantly, keratosis obturans is associated with systemic conditions: bronchiectasis and chronic sinusitis are well-documented associations, suggesting a generalized epithelial dysfunction. Additionally, the expanding keratin mass can cause widening of the external auditory canal and, in severe cases, erosion of the canal wall with potential facial nerve involvement due to its anatomical proximity. All three statements—epithelial migration failure, meatal widening with facial nerve palsy risk, and systemic associations with bronchiectasis/sinusitis—are true features of this condition. This is distinct from cholesteatoma, which involves retraction pockets and bone erosion. Indian ENT practice recognizes these associations in patients with chronic respiratory disease.
Why the other options are wrong
A. Failure of migration of desquamated epithelium long posterior meatal wall — While this statement is true and is the primary pathophysiological mechanism of keratosis obturans, selecting only this option ignores the equally important systemic associations and potential complications. This is a partial truth trap—NBE tests whether students recognize that keratosis obturans is a multifaceted condition with local AND systemic features, not just a local epithelial problem. B. Widening of meatus and facial nerve palsy might be seen — This statement is also true—the expanding keratin mass erodes the canal wall, widening the meatus, and can compress the facial nerve as it runs posteriorly in the canal. However, selecting only this option misses the pathophysiological basis (epithelial migration failure) and the critical systemic associations that define the disease. This is a distractor that captures only the complications. C. Associated bronchiectasis and sinusitis — This statement is true—keratosis obturans has well-established associations with bronchiectasis and chronic sinusitis, reflecting a generalized epithelial dysfunction. However, selecting only this option ignores the local pathophysiology and canal complications. NBE uses this to test whether students understand that keratosis obturans is a systemic disease with local manifestations, not just an isolated ear finding.
High-Yield Facts
- Keratosis obturans = impacted keratin in EAC due to failure of normal epithelial migration from tympanic membrane laterally
- Systemic associations: bronchiectasis, chronic sinusitis, and chronic suppurative airway disease—suggests generalized epithelial dysfunction
- Canal erosion can lead to meatal widening and facial nerve palsy (CN VII runs posteriorly in the canal)
- Conductive hearing loss is the primary symptom; otorrhea and aural fullness are common presenting complaints
- Distinction from cholesteatoma: keratosis obturans is benign accumulation; cholesteatoma involves retraction pocket and bone erosion with higher morbidity
Mnemonics
KO = Keratin Obstruction + systemic disease Keratin impaction + Obstructed migration + Bronchiectasis/Sinusitis association. Remember: it's not just a local ear problem—think systemic epithelial dysfunction. FACES of Keratosis Obturans Failure of epithelial migration, Associated bronchiectasis/sinusitis, Canal widening, Erosion with facial nerve risk, Systemic disease marker.
NBE Trap
NBE splits keratosis obturans into three separate true statements and offers each as a single-answer option to test whether students recognize this is a multisystem disease with local and systemic features. Students who know only the pathophysiology or only the complications will select a partial answer; the trap is that all three aspects are equally important and testable.
Clinical Pearl
In Indian clinical practice, keratosis obturans should raise suspicion for underlying bronchiectasis or chronic sinusitis—a patient presenting with recurrent aural fullness and conductive hearing loss warrants imaging of the chest and sinuses. This systemic link is often missed in routine ENT clinics but is crucial for comprehensive management.
_Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 58 (Otology); Robbins Ch. 25 (Ear pathology)_