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school:SOM

Department/Unit:Otolaryngology

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Meningitis in cochlear implant recipients: the North American experience

Cohen, Noel L; Roland, J Thomas Jr; Marrinan, Michelle
INTRODUCTION: Until recently, postimplant meningitis was infrequently reported and felt to be uncommon. However, in the spring of 2002, there was a sudden increase in the number of reported cases of postimplantation meningitis in both Europe and North America. OBJECTIVE: Because complications of surgery often tend to be underreported, we decided to survey all cochlear implant centers in North America to determine the true incidence of postimplant meningitis and to learn more about the demographics and risk factors. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted a prospective study. A survey instrument was designed asking surgeons the number of implants performed and whether they had seen any cases of meningitis after implantation. If the answer was affirmative, they were asked to respond to a 20-point questionnaire. This instrument was sent to all 401 cochlear implant centers in North America. SETTING: Tertiary care referral centers. PATIENTS: We studied all patients having received cochlear implants in North America. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of cases of postimplant meningitis, age of patients, device used, cochlear and temporal bone abnormalities, treatment, and outcomes. RESULTS: Meningitis is more common than previously thought. Risk factors included young age, cochlear dysplasia, temporal bone abnormalities, and the use of a two-part electrode system. This survey led to the involvement by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in a much more intensive analysis of a subset of the cases. CONCLUSIONS: Postimplant meningitis is related to patient, surgical, and device factors. By being aware of the risk factors involved, adhering to sound surgical principles such as packing of the cochleostomy with soft tissue, appropriately vaccinating patients, and eliminating any potentially traumatic electrode arrays, the incidence of meningitis should be significantly diminished
PMID: 15129105
ISSN: 1531-7129
CID: 46169

Long-term auditory adaptation to a modified peripheral frequency map

Neuburger, H; Silveira, A; Svirsky, M A; Suarez, H; Teoh, Su-Wooi
OBJECTIVE: Cochlear implants (CIs) attempt to mimic the tonotopicity of the normal ear by stimulating more basal regions of the cochlea in response to higher frequencies. However, there may be a mismatch between the normal place-frequency map and that implemented by a CI. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Aiming to measure this potential mismatch and its changes over time, the present study used a method-of-adjustment procedure where CI users and normal-hearing listeners selected synthetic vowels to match prespecified vowel targets. Data from CI users were obtained longitudinally, starting on the day of initial stimulation and continuing for 2 years. RESULTS: CI users showed a significant amount of initial mismatch with respect to the normal-hearing listeners, but they also showed significant learning and adaptation over time and achieved nearly normal performance after some experience with the CI. CONCLUSION: In general, the adaptation process took several months, suggesting that some CI users may benefit from alternative signal processing or rehabilitation procedures designed to facilitate perceptual learning after cochlear implantation
PMID: 15224858
ISSN: 0001-6489
CID: 67960

Which paragangliomas of the head and neck have a higher rate of malignancy? [Editorial]

Rinaldo, Alessandra; Myssiorek, David; Devaney, Kenneth O; Ferlito, Alfio
PMID: 15006616
ISSN: 1368-8375
CID: 73720

Long-term results of lower-lid suspension blepharoplasty: a 30-year experience

Honrado, Carlo P; Pastorek, Norman J
BACKGROUND: Muscle suspension blepharoplasty remains a reliable method to tighten the loose skin and muscle of the lower eyelid. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the 30-year experience of the senior author (N.J.P.) with the skin-muscle suspension technique for lower-lid blepharoplasty.Patients and METHODS: Of 4395 patients who underwent lower-lid blepharoplasty, 3988 had muscle suspension blepahroplasty performed with adequate follow-up. RESULTS: Results of the 30-year review showed that most patients were very satisfied with the procedure. There were 67 complications (2 hematomas, 1 poor scar, 24 cases of scleral show <1 mm, and 40 cases of chemosis). Chemosis resolved in 2 to 8 weeks, and there were no cases of ectropion, scleral show greater than 1 mm, dry eye, or vision loss. Revision surgery was needed in 41 patients, all of whom were satisfied after the secondary procedure. CONCLUSION: Despite the recent drift toward orbital fat preservation for lower-lid blepharoplasty, conventional lower-lid muscle suspension offers the surgeon a reliable method to tighten the loose skin and muscle of the lower eyelid and give the patient a more attractive, youthful appearance
PMID: 15148120
ISSN: 1521-2491
CID: 96999

Comparison of cerebral blood volume and vascular permeability from dynamic susceptibility contrast-enhanced perfusion MR imaging with glioma grade

Law, Meng; Yang, Stanley; Babb, James S; Knopp, Edmond A; Golfinos, John G; Zagzag, David; Johnson, Glyn
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) and vascular permeability (K(trans)) permit in vivo assessment of glioma microvasculature. We assessed the associations between rCBV and K(trans) derived from dynamic, susceptibility-weighted, contrast-enhanced (DSC) MR imaging and tumor grade and between rCBV and K(trans). METHODS: Seventy-three patients with primary gliomas underwent conventional and DSC MR imaging. rCBVs were obtained from regions of maximal abnormality for each lesion on rCBV color maps. K(trans) was derived from a pharmacokinetic modeling algorithm. Histopathologic grade was compared with rCBV and K(trans) (Tukey honestly significant difference). Spearman and Pearson correlation factors were determined between rCBV, K(trans), and tumor grade. The diagnostic utility of rCBV and K(trans) in discriminating grade II or III tumors from grade I tumors was assessed by logistic regression. RESULTS: rCBV was significantly different for all three grades (P </=.0005). K(trans) was significantly different between grade I and grade II or III (P =.027) but not between other grades or combinations of grades. Spearman rank and Pearson correlations, respectively, were as follows: rCBV and grade, r = 0.817 and r = 0.771; K(trans) and grade, r = 0.234 and r = 0.277; and rCBV and K(trans), r = 0.266 and r = 0.163. Only rCBV was significantly predictive of high-grade gliomas (P <.0001). CONCLUSION: rCBV with strongly correlated with tumor grade; the correlation between K(trans) and tumor grade was weaker. rCBV and K(trans) were positively but weakly correlated, suggesting that these parameters demonstrate different tumor characteristics. rCBV is a more significant predictor of high-grade glioma than K(trans)
PMID: 15140713
ISSN: 0195-6108
CID: 43846

Bilingual oral language proficiency in children with cochlear implants

McConkey Robbins, Amy; Green, Janet E; Waltzman, Susan B
OBJECTIVE: To document oral language proficiency in a group of prelingually deaf bilingual children with a cochlear implant. DESIGN: Using a repeated-measures paradigm, oral language skills in the first and second language were evaluated at 2 yearly intervals after implantation. Language data were compared with normative data from children with normal hearing. SUBJECTS: Twelve deaf children between the ages of 20 months and 15 years who had received a cochlear implant before the age of 3 years. OUTCOME MEASURE: First-language skills were assessed using 1 of 2 standardized tests, either the Oral and Written Language Scales or the Reynell Developmental Language Scales, depending on the child's age. Second-language proficiency was assessed using the Student Oral Language Observation Matrix. RESULTS: Average standard scores in the first language fell solidly within the average range of normal-hearing peers. Second-language skills showed steady improvement from year 1 to year 2, along a continuum that reflected the amount and intensity of exposure of the child to the second language and the length of experience with the implant. CONCLUSION: A cochlear implant can make oral proficiency in more than 1 language possible for prelingually deaf children
PMID: 15148191
ISSN: 0886-4470
CID: 94222

Recurrence rates after endoscopic sinus surgery for massive sinus polyposis

Wynn, Rhoda; Har-El, Gady
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Most studies on outcome after endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) include patients with varying degrees of disease severity. Recurrence rates cited by those studies may not apply to the subset of patients with severe polyposis. Our aim is to provide reference information for recurrence rates and need for revision surgery in patients with severe disease. STUDY DESIGN, PATIENTS, AND METHODS: Review of patients with severe polyposis with a minimum Lund-McKay score of 16 and with a Kennedy computed tomography stage 3 or 4. Data collection included demographics, presence of asthma or documented allergy, history of previous surgery, extent of surgery, preoperative and postoperative management, recurrence rates, revision surgery rates, and follow-up. RESULTS: One hundred and eighteen records were reviewed. Fifty-nine (50%) patients had asthma, and 93 (79%) had documented allergy. All patients required extensive bilateral nasal polypectomy, complete anterior and posterior ethmoidectomy, and maxillary sinusotomy. One hundred (85%) also had frontal or sphenoid sinusotomy. Follow-up ranged from 12 to 168 (median 40) months. Seventy-one (60%) developed recurrent polyposis. Fifty-five (47%) were advised to undergo revision surgery, and 32 (27%) underwent surgery. History of previous sinus surgery or asthma predicted higher recurrence (P <.005, P <.001) and revision surgery rates (P =.02, P <.001). History of allergy also predicted recurrence and need for revision (P <.001, P <.001). CONCLUSIONS: Recurrence rates after ESS for severe polyposis are significant. In our study, patients with asthma are at higher risk of recurrence
PMID: 15126735
ISSN: 0023-852x
CID: 142806

Sketches of otohistory. Part 2: origins of otology in the British Isles: Wilde And Toynbee [Historical Article]

Hawkins, Joseph E
PMID: 15084817
ISSN: 1420-3030
CID: 400252

Germline mutations in BRCA2: shared genetic susceptibility to breast cancer, early onset leukemia, and Fanconi anemia

Wagner, John E; Tolar, Jakub; Levran, Orna; Scholl, Thomas; Deffenbaugh, Amie; Satagopan, Jaya; Ben-Porat, Leah; Mah, Katherine; Batish, Sat Dev; Kutler, David I; MacMillan, Margaret L; Hanenberg, Helmut; Auerbach, Arleen D
The breast cancer susceptibility gene BRCA2 has recently been identified as identical to the Fanconi anemia (FA) gene FANCD1. Here we expand the clinical implications of this discovery. Notably, we identified 6 children in 5 kindreds exhibiting the co-occurrence of BRCA2 mutations, FA, and early onset acute leukemia. Leukemia occurred at a median of 2.2 years of age in the BRCA2 patients in contrast to a median onset of 13.4 years in all other FA patients in the International Fanconi Anemia Registry (IFAR; P <.0001). Breast cancer was noted in 4 of the 5 kindreds. Of the 6 children with leukemia, 4 were treated with bone marrow transplantation and 2 are alive at 3 and 9 months after treatment. Our results suggest that BRCA2 testing should be considered in all patients with FA in whom the complementation group cannot be defined or in whom leukemia is diagnosed at or before 5 years of age
PMID: 15070707
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 43172

Cervical lipoblastoma: an uncommon diagnosis of neck mass [Case Report]

Shah, Anil R; Wei, Julie L; Maddalozzo, John
PMID: 15100656
ISSN: 0194-5998
CID: 65119