Leading Expertise in Endoscopic Ear Surgery
Transcanal endoscopic ear surgery (TEES) is minimally invasive surgery to operate on tiny, delicate structures within the middle ear. It differs from traditional ear surgery in that surgeons access the middle ear through the ear canal rather than through an incision behind the ear. This causes less pain and results in faster recovery.
Most middle-ear conditions that we treat with TEES are not life-threatening, but they can greatly affect a person’s quality of life. As these conditions progress, they can destroy nearby structures, such as the ear bones, facial nerve, and the inner ear. Surgery is often necessary to avoid complications such as hearing loss, facial paralysis, balance problems, or brain infections such as meningitis, which can be life-threatening.
The neurotologists in our Comprehensive Skull Base Program are specialists in medical and surgical care for disorders of the ear, cranial nerves, and the skull base. We treat patients of all ages for hearing loss, balance problems, tumors, infections, injuries, congenital (present since birth) defects, and facial nerve disorders.
Our highly skilled team is pioneering research on TEES to improve currently used techniques and to discover more ways to use the advantages of the procedure. Our surgeons train neurotologists and otolaryngologists locally and around the world in the latest minimally invasive and open surgical procedures, and they also speak and present their research at both national and international conferences. UT Southwestern is one of only a few centers in the country that offers TEES, and we’re the first to use the procedure for the removal of acoustic neuroma tumors.