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Frontal bone reconstruction with split calvarial and cancellous iliac bone [Case Report]

Kohan D; Plasse HM; Zide BM
An autogenous split-thickness calvarial bone graft that was used to correct a marked depression in the frontal region of the forehead resulted in excellent cosmesis. Cancellous bone from the iliac crest, which was applied between the posterior wall of the frontal sinus and the anterior calvarial bone graft, eliminated the dead space and made infection less likely in an area prone to such infections
PMID: 2612392
ISSN: 0145-5613
CID: 18181

Teflon injection for vocal cord paralysis after intracranial operation

Heller EM; Ransohoff J; Plasse H; Cohen NL
Vocal cord paralysis may follow intracranial operation if the vagus nerve is damaged intraoperatively. If the resulting laryngeal incompetence is severe, hoarseness, dysphagia, and aspiration may develop. This is often followed by a pneumonitis requiring chronic gastric tube feeding. Teflon vocal cord injection has been shown to restore the sphincteric action of the larynx and enable patients to phonate and swallow properly again. Nine patients underwent this procedure for chronic aspiration and hoarseness. All had vagus injury attributable to antecedent intracranial operation, and all experienced relief of their symptoms with only minor complications. Teflon vocal cord injection is advocated as a safe, effective means of managing patients with aspiration and dysphagia secondary to vagus nerve injury
PMID: 3419577
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 11067

DELAYED CELLULITIS SECONDARY TO AN UNRECOGNIZED METALLIC FOREIGN-BODY OF THE MAXILLARY SINUS [Meeting Abstract]

PLASSE, HM; HARNICK, DB; MYSSIOREK, D
ISI:A1985ARA4300094
ISSN: 0194-5998
CID: 73789

Bilateral vocal cord paralysis in Parkinson's disease

Plasse, H M; Lieberman, A N
We report two cases of bilateral vocal cord paralysis in patients with Parkinson's disease and review the possible causes of this condition. We suggest that the vocal cord muscle paralysis is a manifestation of advanced disease. Bilateral vocal cord paralysis in Parkinson's disease may be seen more commonly in the future as therapy enables more patients to live longer
PMID: 7213187
ISSN: 0003-9977
CID: 122223

Unilateral sudden hearing loss after open heart surgery: a detailed study of seven cases [Case Report]

Plasse HM; Mittleman M; Frost JO
Seven of the 7000 patients who underwent cardiopulmonary bypass at Bellevue and University Hospitals between 1969 and 1978 developed sudden loss of hearing in one ear immediately after surgery. Four of the seven patients showed subsequent improvement in hearing but none recovered completely. None had vertigo. All were male. The most likely cause is particulate microemboli generated by cardiopulmonary bypass
PMID: 7453456
ISSN: 0023-852x
CID: 26400

Unilateral sudden loss of hearing: an unusual complication of cardiac operation

Plasse HM; Spencer FC; Mittleman M; Frost JO
Between 1969 and 1978 7,000 patients underwent cardiopulmonary bypass at Bellevue and University Hospitals. In seven of these patients, sudden loss of hearing in one ear developed immediately after the operation. Four of the seven patients showed improvement in hearing after the initial loss, although in no case did the hearing return completely to normal. None of the patients had vertigo but two were listless postoperatively. Two of the operations were for congenital heart disease; the remainder were coronary artery bypass procedures. All of the affected patients were male. There was no predilection as to which ear was affected. The most likely cause is particulate emboli generated by cardiopulmonary bypass. Other possible sources of emboli include air, antifoam, fat, and particulate matter from calcified valves and the aorta. Improvement in the kind of pump and the addition of various filters in the period between 1969 and 1978 did not eliminate unilateral hearing loss. The relationship between cerebral emboli and decreased consciousness after operations is also discussed
PMID: 6966351
ISSN: 0022-5223
CID: 26401