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Sequential bilateral cochlear implantation in the adolescent population

Friedmann, David R; Green, Janet; Fang, Yixin; Ensor, Kelsey; Roland, J Thomas; Waltzman, Susan B
OBJECTIVES: To examine the variables affecting outcomes for sequential bilateral cochlear implantation patients in the adolescent population. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective chart review at tertiary care center. METHODS: Main outcome measures were open set speech recognition tests at the word (Consonant-Nucleus-Consonant/Phonetically Balanced Kindergarten List Test [CNC/PBK]) and sentence levels in noise (Hearing in Noise Test-Noise [HINT-N]) in different test conditions with respect to the age at first and sequential implantation, as well as the interval between implants. RESULTS: Despite a mean age at sequential implantation of 13.5 years, sequential bilateral implanted adolescents revealed significant improvement in the sequential cochlear implant (CI2) ear. The mean time interval between implants was 8.2 years. A wide range of performance was noted, and age at implantation and interval between first cochlear implant (CI1) and CI2 did not predict outcome. Mean CNC/PBK score with CI1 alone was 83.0%, with the CI2 alone was 56.5%, and with bilateral implants was 86.8%. Sentence scores (HINT-N) were 89.5% for CI1, 74.2% for CI2, and 94.4% for bilateral CI condition. The clinical relevance of these enhanced perception abilities requires attention to individual device use, performance with the first implant, and subjective benefits reported by patients. CONCLUSIONS: Bilateral sequential cochlear implantation leads to improved speech perception in the adolescent population and should be considered in this population, even after a long period of deafness and despite a prolonged interval between implants. Numerous factors affect the ability to predict performance, but age at implantation and interimplant interval were not correlated with performance measures. Extensive preoperative counseling and individualized evaluation are critical to ensure that patients and families understand the range of possible outcomes. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 6. Laryngoscope, 2015.
PMID: 25946482
ISSN: 1531-4995
CID: 1569452

Predictors and Trajectories of Morning Fatigue Are Distinct from Evening Fatigue

Wright, Fay; D'Eramo Melkus, Gail; Hammer, Marilyn; Schmidt, Brian L; Knobf, M Tish; Paul, Steven M; Cartwright, Frances; Mastick, Judy; Cooper, Bruce A; Chen, Lee-May; Melisko, Michelle; Levine, Jon D; Kober, Kord; Aouizerat, Bradley E; Miaskowski, Christine
CONTEXT: Fatigue is the most common symptom in oncology patients during chemotherapy (CTX). Little is known about the predictors of interindividual variability in initial levels and trajectories of morning fatigue severity in these patients. OBJECTIVES: An evaluation was done to determine which demographic, clinical, and symptom characteristics were associated with initial levels as well as the trajectories of morning fatigue and to compare findings with our companion paper on evening fatigue. METHODS: A sample of outpatients with breast, gastrointestinal, gynecological, and lung cancer (N=586) completed demographic and symptom questionnaires a total of six times over two cycles of CTX. Fatigue severity was evaluated using the Lee Fatigue Scale. Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) was used to answer the study objectives. RESULTS: A large amount of interindividual variability was found in the morning fatigue trajectories. A piecewise model fit the data best. Patients with higher body mass index (BMI), who did not exercise regularly, with a lower functional status, and who had higher levels of state anxiety, sleep disturbance and depressive symptoms, reported higher levels of morning fatigue at enrollment. Variations in the trajectories of morning fatigue were predicted by the patients' ethnicity and younger age. CONCLUSION: The modifiable risk factors that were associated with only morning fatigue were BMI, exercise, and state anxiety. Modifiable risk factors that were associated with both morning and evening fatigue included functional status, depressive symptoms, and sleep disturbance. Using this information, clinicians can identify patients at higher risk for more severe morning fatigue and evening fatigue, provide individualized patient education, and tailor interventions to address the modifiable risk factors.
PMCID:4526314
PMID: 25828559
ISSN: 1873-6513
CID: 1519362

Trajectories of Evening Fatigue in Oncology Outpatients Receiving Chemotherapy

Wright, Fay; D'Eramo Melkus, Gail; Hammer, Marilyn; Schmidt, Brian L; Knobf, M Tish; Paul, Steven M; Cartwright, Frances; Mastick, Judy; Cooper, Bruce A; Chen, Lee-May; Melisko, Michelle; Levine, Jon D; Kober, Kord; Aouizerat, Bradley E; Miaskowski, Christine
CONTEXT: Fatigue is a distressing, persistent sense of physical tiredness that is not proportional to a person's recent activity. Fatigue impacts patients' treatment decisions and can limit their self-care activities. While significant interindividual variability in fatigue severity has been noted, little is known about predictors of interindividual variability in initial levels and trajectories of evening fatigue severity in oncology patients receiving chemotherapy (CTX). OBJECTIVES: To determine whether demographic, clinical, and symptom characteristics were associated with initial levels as well as the trajectories of evening fatigue. METHODS: A sample of outpatients with breast, gastrointestinal, gynecological, and lung cancer (N=586) completed demographic and symptom questionnaires a total of six times over two cycles of CTX. Fatigue severity was evaluated using the Lee Fatigue Scale. Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) was used to answer the study objectives. RESULTS: A large amount of interindividual variability was found in the evening fatigue trajectories. A piecewise model fit the data best. Patients who were White, diagnosed with breast, gynecological, or lung cancer, and who had more years of education, child care responsibilities, lower functional status, and higher levels of sleep disturbance and depression reported higher levels of evening fatigue at enrollment. CONCLUSION: This study identified both non-modifiable (e.g., ethnicity) and modifiable (e.g., child care responsibilities, depressive symptoms, sleep disturbance) risk factors for more severe evening fatigue. Using this information, clinicians can identify patients at higher risk for more severe evening fatigue, provide individualized patient education, and tailor interventions to address the modifiable risk factors.
PMCID:4526403
PMID: 25828560
ISSN: 1873-6513
CID: 1519372

An algorithm for treating extracranial head and neck schwannomas

Yafit, Daniel; Horowitz, Gilad; Vital, Iosif; Locketz, Garrett; Fliss, Dan M
Surgical resection of extracranial head and neck schwannomas (ECHNS) may be associated with major morbidity, but some ECHNSs can be safely treated expectantly. The aim of this study is to present a large case series and an algorithm for therapeutic decision-making in the management of ECHNS. The clinical records of patients diagnosed and treated for ECHNS between 1999 and 2012 at The Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center were reviewed retrospectively. All relevant demographic and medical data were extracted, among them presenting symptoms, surgical approaches, nerve of origin, complications and follow-up. A total of 53 patients with ECHNS were included in this clinical study. There were 29 males and 24 females whose mean age was 49.2 years, and all were treated surgically. The schwannomas originated from the brachial plexus, sympathetic chain, vagus nerve, trigeminal nerve, lip, hypoglossal nerve and larynx. Intracapsular enucleation was performed in 32 (60 %) patients, and the remaining 21 (40 %) patients underwent complete excision of the tumor with the involved nerve segment. Thirty-two patients (60 %) had postoperative neurological deficits. This study provides an algorithm to serve as a guideline in the decision-making process for this patient population. Although there is abundant evidence regarding the efficacy of radiotherapy for acoustic schwannoma, the value of radiotherapy as a treatment alternative for patients with ECNHS, especially those unsuitable for surgery, has not been established and further studies are warranted.
PMID: 24961439
ISSN: 1434-4726
CID: 4951572

In Support of a Patient-Driven Initiative and Petition to Lower the High Price of Cancer Drugs

Tefferi, Ayalew; Kantarjian, Hagop; Rajkumar, S Vincent; Baker, Lawrence H; Abkowitz, Jan L; Adamson, John W; Advani, Ranjana Hira; Allison, James; Antman, Karen H; Bast, Robert C Jr; Bennett, John M; Benz, Edward J Jr; Berliner, Nancy; Bertino, Joseph; Bhatia, Ravi; Bhatia, Smita; Bhojwani, Deepa; Blanke, Charles D; Bloomfield, Clara D; Bosserman, Linda; Broxmeyer, Hal E; Byrd, John C; Cabanillas, Fernando; Canellos, George Peter; Chabner, Bruce A; Chanan-Khan, Asher; Cheson, Bruce; Clarkson, Bayard; Cohn, Susan L; Colon-Otero, Gerardo; Cortes, Jorge; Coutre, Steven; Cristofanilli, Massimo; Curran, Walter J Jr; Daley, George Q; DeAngelo, Daniel J; Deeg, H Joachim; Einhorn, Lawrence H; Erba, Harry P; Esteva, Francisco J; Estey, Elihu; Fidler, Isaiah J; Foran, James; Forman, Stephen; Freireich, Emil; Fuchs, Charles; George, James N; Gertz, Morie A; Giralt, Sergio; Golomb, Harvey; Greenberg, Peter; Gutterman, Jordan; Handin, Robert I; Hellman, Samuel; Hoff, Paulo Marcelo; Hoffman, Ronald; Hong, Waun Ki; Horowitz, Mary; Hortobagyi, Gabriel N; Hudis, Clifford; Issa, Jean Pierre; Johnson, Bruce Evan; Kantoff, Philip W; Kaushansky, Kenneth; Khayat, David; Khuri, Fadlo R; Kipps, Thomas J; Kripke, Margaret; Kyle, Robert A; Larson, Richard A; Lawrence, Theodore S; Levine, Ross; Link, Michael P; Lippman, Scott M; Lonial, Sagar; Lyman, Gary H; Markman, Maurie; Mendelsohn, John; Meropol, Neal J; Messinger, Yoav; Mulvey, Therese M; O'Brien, Susan; Perez-Soler, Roman; Pollock, Raphael; Prchal, Josef; Press, Oliver; Radich, Jerald; Rai, Kanti; Rosenberg, Saul A; Rowe, Jacob M; Rugo, Hope; Runowicz, Carolyn D; Sandmaier, Brenda M; Saven, Alan; Schafer, Andrew I; Schiffer, Charles; Sekeres, Mikkael A; Silver, Richard T; Siu, Lillian L; Steensma, David P; Stewart, F Marc; Stock, Wendy; Stone, Richard; Storb, Rainer; Strong, Louise C; Tallman, Martin S; Thompson, Michael; Ueno, Naoto T; Van Etten, Richard A; Vose, Julie M; Wiernik, Peter H; Winer, Eric P; Younes, Anas; Zelenetz, Andrew D; LeMaistre, Charles A
PMCID:5365030
PMID: 26211600
ISSN: 1942-5546
CID: 1734782

Transient Hearing Loss Within a Critical Period Causes Persistent Changes to Cellular Properties in Adult Auditory Cortex

Mowery, Todd M; Kotak, Vibhakar C; Sanes, Dan H
Sensory deprivation can induce profound changes to central processing during developmental critical periods (CPs), and the recovery of normal function is maximal if the sensory input is restored during these epochs. Therefore, we asked whether mild and transient hearing loss (HL) during discrete CPs could induce changes to cortical cellular physiology. Electrical and inhibitory synaptic properties were obtained from auditory cortex pyramidal neurons using whole-cell recordings after bilateral earplug insertion or following earplug removal. Varying the age of HL onset revealed brief CPs of vulnerability for membrane and firing properties, as well as, inhibitory synaptic currents. These CPs closed 1 week after ear canal opening on postnatal day (P) 18. To examine whether the cellular properties could recover from HL, earplugs were removed prior to (P17) or after (P23), the closure of these CPs. The earlier age of hearing restoration led to greater recovery of cellular function, but firing rate remained disrupted. When earplugs were removed after the closure of these CPs, several changes persisted into adulthood. Therefore, long-lasting cellular deficits that emerge from transient deprivation during a CP may contribute to delayed acquisition of auditory skills in children who experience temporary HL.
PMCID:4494023
PMID: 24554724
ISSN: 1047-3211
CID: 915882

Bilateral Loudness Balancing and Distorted Spatial Perception in Recipients of Bilateral Cochlear Implants

Fitzgerald, Matthew B; Kan, Alan; Goupell, Matthew J
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether bilateral loudness balancing during mapping of bilateral cochlear implants (CIs) produces fused, punctate, and centered auditory images that facilitate lateralization with stimulation on single-electrode pairs. DESIGN: Adopting procedures similar to those that are practiced clinically, direct stimulation was used to obtain most-comfortable levels (C levels) in recipients of bilateral CIs. Three pairs of electrodes, located in the base, middle, and apex of the electrode array, were tested. These electrode pairs were loudness-balanced by playing right-left electrode pairs sequentially. In experiment 1, the authors measured the location, number, and compactness of auditory images in 11 participants in a subjective fusion experiment. In experiment 2, the authors measured the location and number of the auditory images while imposing a range of interaural level differences (ILDs) in 13 participants in a lateralization experiment. Six of these participants repeated the mapping process and lateralization experiment over three separate days to determine the variability in the procedure. RESULTS: In approximately 80% of instances, bilateral loudness balancing was achieved from relatively small adjustments to the C levels (
PMCID:5613176
PMID: 25985017
ISSN: 1538-4667
CID: 1742462

Recent advances in head and neck free tissue transfer

Markey, Jeffrey; Knott, P Daniel; Fritz, Michael A; Seth, Rahul
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Free tissue transfer is a versatile and valuable method for reconstructing select head and neck defects following trauma or oncologic resection. Microvascular reconstructive cases are among the longest, most technically challenging, and most labor-intensive operations performed by departments of otolaryngology/head and neck surgery. However, technical advances, increased experience, and robust training programs have permitted realization of microvascular success rates in excess of 97% at most high-volume centers. Given this unprecedented degree of success, research emphasis has shifted to advancing techniques, expanding indications, and increasing efficiencies. RECENT FINDINGS: Although numerous topics are important for discussion, this update focuses on recent notable advances in reconstruction. These include expanding utility of the anterolateral thigh free flap in soft tissue reconstruction, prefabricated plating for fibula free flap mandibular reconstruction, use of venous couplers, and postoperative free tissue monitoring techniques. SUMMARY: Improvements in technique, technology, and monitoring continue to improve success rates, reduce operative time and associated morbidity, improve overall functional outcomes, and improve patient-specific quality of life. These highlighted recent advances, amongst others, promote further advancement and simplification of reconstructive capabilities.
PMID: 26164856
ISSN: 1531-6998
CID: 2718902

Isolated congenital maxillomandibular synechiae

Cerrati, Eric W; Ahmed, Omar H; Rickert, Scott M
INTRODUCTION: Congenital maxillomandibular syngnathia, or fusion of the jaws, is a rare condition that has a broad spectrum of presentations. The restricted mouth opening can lead to issues with feeding, swallowing, and respiration resulting in failure to thrive and temporomandibular joint ankylosis. Early recognition and treatment is necessary for proper growth and development. CASE REPORT: We report a 1-day-old male with isolated bilateral soft tissue alveolar fibrous bands. He presented with difficulty feeding secondary to trismus. No bony or muscular involvement in the synechiae was noted and the remainder of the physical exam was unremarkable. The bilateral alveolar synechiae were divided under local anesthesia using surgical scissors. The patient immediately showed improvement in mouth opening and had resolution of his feeding problems. He is now gaining weight and developing appropriately. DISCUSSION: The accompanying review of the literature demonstrates only 11 cases worldwide of isolated maxillomandibular fusion. Depending upon the composition of the synechiae, simple surgical division under local anesthesia can be curative.
PMID: 25957707
ISSN: 1532-818x
CID: 1578992

Is Intraoperative Parathyroid Hormone Monitoring Warranted in Cases of 4D-CT/Ultrasound Localized Single Adenomas?

Heineman, Thomas E; Kutler, David I; Cohen, Marc A; Kuhel, William I
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the utility of intraoperative parathyroid hormone (IOPTH) monitoring for patients with primary hyperparathyroidism who had evidence of single-gland disease on preoperative imaging with modified 4-dimensional computed tomography that was done in conjunction with ultrasonography (Mod 4D-CT/US). STUDY DESIGN: Case series with chart review. SETTING: Tertiary care university medical center. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Patients were drawn from consecutive directed parathyroidectomies performed between December 2001 and June 2013 by the senior authors. All patients had primary hyperparathyroidism and underwent a Mod 4D-CT/US study that showed findings on both studies that were consistent with a single adenoma. The modified Miami criteria were used for IOPTH monitoring (parathyroid hormone decrease by >50% and into the normal range). RESULTS: Of 356 patients who underwent parathyroid surgery, 206 had a single gland localized on the Mod 4D-CT and the US studies. IOPTH monitoring was used in 172 cases, of which 169 had adequate clinical follow-up to assess the surgical outcome. Twenty-one patients (12.4%) had IOPTH values that did not meet modified Miami criteria after removal of one gland, of which 7 were found to have multigland disease (4.1%). Three patients (1.8%) had persistent primary hyperparathyroidism despite an IOPTH that met modified Miami criteria. CONCLUSIONS: Although IOPTH monitoring correctly identifies a small percentage of patients with multigland disease, some patients will be subjected to unnecessary neck explorations that can result in difficult intraoperative decisions, such as whether to remove normal or equivocal-sized glands when they are encountered.
PMID: 26124265
ISSN: 1097-6817
CID: 1650442