Journal of Otolaryngology - Head & Neck Surgery

  1916-0216

 

 

Cơ quản chủ quản:  Decker Publishing , BMC

Lĩnh vực:
SurgeryOtorhinolaryngology

Các bài báo tiêu biểu

Clinical evidence based review and recommendations of aerosol generating medical procedures in otolaryngology – head and neck surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic
Tập 49 Số 1 - 2020
Andrew Thamboo, Jane Lea, Doron D. Sommer, Leigh J. Sowerby, Arman Abdalkhani, Christopher Diamond, Jennifer Ham, Austin Heffernan, Cai Long, Jobanjit Phulka, Yu Qi Wu, Phillip Yeung, Marc J. W. Lammers
Abstract Background Aerosol generating medical procedures (AGMPs) present risks to health care workers (HCW) due to airborne transmission of pathogens. During the COVID-19 pandemic, it is essential for HCWs to recognize which procedures are potentially aerosolizing so that appropriate infection prevention precautions can be taken. The aim of this literature review was to identify potential AGMPs in Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery and provide evidence-based recommendations. Methods A literature search was performed on Medline, Embase and Cochrane Review databases up to April 3, 2020. All titles and abstracts of retrieved studies were evaluated and all studies mentioning potential AGMPs were included for formal review. Full text of included studies were assessed by two reviewers and the quality of the studies was evaluated. Ten categories of potential AGMPs were developed and recommendations were provided for each category. Results Direct evidence indicates that CO2 laser ablation, the use of high-speed rotating devices, electrocautery and endotracheal suctioning are AGMPs. Indirect evidence indicates that tracheostomy should be considered as potential AGMPs. Nasal endoscopy and nasal packing/epistaxis management can result in droplet transmission, but it is unknown if these procedures also carry the risk of airborne transmission. Conclusions During the COVID-19 pandemic, special care should be taken when CO2 lasers, electrocautery and high-speed rotating devices are used in potentially infected tissue. Tracheal procedures like tracheostomy and endotracheal suctioning can also result in airborne transmission via small virus containing aerosols.
Age dependent normal horizontal VOR gain of head impulse test as measured with video-oculography
Tập 44 Số 1 - 2015
Benjamin Mossman, Stuart Mossman, Gordon Purdie, Erich Schneider
Measuring Cochlear Duct Length – a historical analysis of methods and results
Tập 46 Số 1 - 2017
Robert W. Koch, Hanif M. Ladak, Mai Elfarnawany, Sumit K. Agrawal
Clinically relevant phenotypes in chronic rhinosinusitis
- 2019
Jessica W. Grayson, Marina Neves Cavada, Richard J. Harvey
Background Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a complex disease that incorporates many different conditions. Currently, primary CRS is considered a disease of broad airway inflammation, however, the previous classification of CRS with and without nasal polyposis fails to adequately classify patients based upon their etiology of illness. Our aim with this review is discuss the clinical presentation, radiology, endoscopy, histopathology, and treatment algorithm of three different phenotypes of primary CRS: central compartment atopic disease, eosinophilic CRS, and non-eosinophilic CRS. Methods A narrative review of a tertiary rhinology center's research themes and how they are applied to clinical protocols and practice was assessed. Discussion Diagnosis and treatment of upper and lower airway conditions become increasingly important as phenotypes and endotypes are being described. There are well-described therapies to treat the different phenotypes of CRS, based upon the presumed underlying cause of the inflammatory process. Research continues to shed more light on different endotypes and phenotypes of airway inflammation, however, clinical differentiation of CRS can be applied in clinic practice with three simple phenotypes of CRS. Understanding these different phenotypes and their etiologies allows for further management beyond the ‘maximum medical therapy and then surgery’ approach that has often been used in the management of CRS.
Osteoradionecrosis of the mandible: A case series at a single institution
- 2013
Artur Gevorgyan, Kenny Wong, Ian Poon, Nick Blanas, Danny Enepekides, Kevin Higgins
Background Osteoradionecrosis (ORN) defines exposed irradiated bone, which fails to heal over a period of 3–6 months without evidence of residual or recurrent tumor. In the previous decades, a staging and treatment protocol suggested by Marx, has dominated the approach to ORN. However, recently this paradigm is shifting. The purpose of this study was to evaluate our institutional experience in managing ORN through a retrospective review of case series from a large urban academic cancer centre. Methods A retrospective chart review was conducted to include all ORN cases from 2003 to 2009 diagnosed at the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery and the Department of Dentistry. The staging of ORN was assessed as affected by tumor site, tumor stage, radiotherapy modality and dose, chemotherapy, dental work, and time to diagnosis. The effectiveness of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO) and surgery in the management of ORN was evaluated. Results Fourteen cases of ORN were documented (incidence 0.84%). Primary subsites included tonsils, tongue, retromolar trigone, parotid gland, soft palate and buccal mucosa. There were 5 (35.7%) stage 1, 3 (21.4%) stage 2, and 6 (42.9%) stage 3 cases. ORN severity was not significantly associated with gender, smoking, alcohol use, tumor site, T stage, N stage, AJCC stage, or treatment modality (radiation alone, surgery with adjuvant radiation or adjuvant chemoradiation). Patients treated with intensity-modulated radiotherapy developed less severe ORN compared to those treated with conventional radiotherapy (p < 0.015). ORN stage did not correlate with radiation dose. In one patient only dental procedures were performed following radiation and could be implicated as the cause of ORN. HBO therapy failed to prevent ORN progression. Surgical treatment was required for most stage 2 (partial resections and free tissue transfers) and stage 3 patients (mandibulectomies and free tissue transfers, including two flaps in one patient). At an average follow up of 26 months, all patients were cancer-free, and there was no evidence of ORN in 84% of patients. Conclusions In early ORN, we advocate a conservative approach with local care, while reserving radical resections with robust reconstruction with vascularized free tissue for advanced stages.
Effect of preoperative immunonutrition on complications after salvage surgery in head and neck cancer
- 2019
Simon A. Mueller, Catherine Mayer, Beat Bojaxhiu, Carla Aeberhard, Philipp Schuetz, Zeno Stanga, Roland Giger
High definition video teaching module for learning neck dissection
- 2014
Adrian Mendez, Hadi Seikaly, Kal Ansari, Russell Murphy, David Côté
Prognostic factors for head and neck cancer of unknown primary including the impact of human papilloma virus infection
Tập 46 Số 1 - 2017
Lars Axelsson, Jan Nyman, Hedda Haugen-Cange, Mogens Bove, Leif Johansson, Shahin De Lara, Anikó Kovács, Eva Hammerlid
Rates of thyroid malignancy by FNA diagnostic category
Tập 42 Số 1 - 2013
Blair Williams, Martin Bullock, Jonathan Trites, S. Mark Taylor, Robert D. Hart
The effect of adenoid hypertrophy on maxillofacial development: an objective photographic analysis
Tập 45 Số 1 - 2016
Çiğdem Fırat Koca, Tamer Erdem, Tuba Bayındır