Searched for: Department/Unit:Otolaryngology
A review of 308 cases of revision stapedectomy
Hammerschlag PE; Fishman A; Scheer AA
OBJECTIVE/HYPOTHESIS: Identify causes of primary and revision stapedectomy failure in 308 patients, assess whether these are different based on source of initial surgery, and evaluate hearing results in revision stapedectomy to improve outcome. Study Design: Retrospective, nonrandomized chart review of patients undergoing revision stapedectomy in a referral otology practice in a large metropolitan region. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Intraoperative findings, preoperative and postoperative revision stapedectomy air and bone conduction pure-tone averages, speech discrimination scores, postoperative air-bone gaps, complications, and repeated revisions were noted in 308 patients. RESULTS: Leading causes of primary stapedectomy failure included dislocated prosthesis (24.4%), inadequate prosthesis length (14%), long process resorption (14%), and fibrous adhesions (13.6%). Revision stapedectomy air-bone gaps were less than 10 dB in 80% and greater than 30 dB in 6.8% of cases. Increased sensorineural hearing loss occurred in 0.8% of revision stapedectomy cases. Five of seven cases of vertigo associated with primary stapedectomy resolved after revision surgery. CONCLUSION: Revision stapedectomy by experienced surgeons is highly effective in attaining successful air-bone gap closure in 80% and improved closure in 84.8% of operative cases. Risk of vertigo and/or sensorineural hearing loss was not any higher in this patient population when compared with reports of primary stapedectomy
PMID: 9851493
ISSN: 0023-852x
CID: 7591
Paradoxical spread of renal cell carcinoma to the head and neck [Case Report]
Gottlieb MD; Roland JT Jr
OBJECTIVES: To present cases of renal cell carcinoma presenting with only head and neck metastases, to review theories of physiology and anatomy describing this phenomenon, and to discuss the role of the otolaryngologist in the treatment of these lesions. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review of the records of three patients who presented with renal cell carcinoma with head and neck metastases over the 3-year period from 1992 to 1995. METHODS: Retrospective review of the records of three patients who presented with renal cell carcinoma with head and neck metastases. In addition, English-language literature was reviewed with special focus on the anatomic and physiologic pathways possible to allow for such a phenomenon. CONCLUSIONS: Renal cell carcinoma has an occasional presentation as a head and neck mass without evidence of disease elsewhere. Various routes of spread have been postulated. Batson's venous plexus, as postulated by Nahum and Bailey, is an anatomic route through which emboli could navigate to the head and neck and avoid pulmonary vascular filtration. Interactions on the cellular level may also be responsible for the seemingly paradoxical spread. We recommend local excision of head and neck metastases of renal cell carcinoma without sacrifice of vital structures as a sound treatment regimen
PMID: 9738745
ISSN: 0023-852x
CID: 12073
Use of the ISG system for 3-D craniotomy
Chapter by: Golfinos JG; Spetzler RF
in: Textbook of stereotactic and functional neurosurgery by Gildenberg PL; Tasker RR; Franklin PO [Eds]
New York : McGraw-Hill, 1998
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0070236046
CID: 3149
Report of the first case of invasive fungal sinusitis caused by Scopulariopsis acremonium: review of scopulariopsis infections [Case Report]
Ellison MD; Hung RT; Harris K; Campbell BH
Scopulariopsis acremonium is a species of saprophytic fungus not previously reported to cause invasive disease in humans, although invasive infections from other species of Scopulariopsis have been reported and are reviewed. Deep infection with this fungus is associated with a high mortality rate. Invasive fungal sinusitis, in general, is a potentially fatal disease that typically affects immunocompromised patients, such as those receiving intensive chemotherapy or undergoing bone marrow transplantation. We report a case of invasive fungal sinusitis caused by Scopulariopsis acremonium in a patient with leukemia, who was successfully treated with amphotericin B, itraconazole, endoscopic sinus surgery, and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor
PMID: 9738812
ISSN: 0886-4470
CID: 66257
Improvements in speech perception by children with profound prelingual hearing loss: effects of device, communication mode, and chronological age
Meyer, T A; Svirsky, M A; Kirk, K I; Miyamoto, R T
The present investigation expanded on an earlier study by Miyamoto, Osberger, Todd, Robbins, Karasek, et al. (1994) who compared the speech perception skills of two groups of children with profound prelingual hearing loss. The first group had received the Nucleus multichannel cochlear implant and was tested longitudinally. The second group, who were not implanted and used conventional hearing aids, was tested at a single point in time. In the present study, speech perception scores were examined over time for both groups of children as a function of communication mode of the child. Separate linear regressions of speech perception scores as a function of age were computed to estimate the rate of improvement in speech perception abilities that might be expected due to maturation for the hearing aid users (n=58) within each communication mode. The resulting regression lines were used to compare the estimated rate of speech perception growth for each hearing aid group to the observed gains in speech perception made by the children with multichannel cochlear implants. A large number of children using cochlear implants (n=74) were tested over a long period of implant use (m=3.5 years) that ranged from zero to 8.5 years. In general, speech perception scores for the children using cochlear implants were higher than those predicted for a group of children with 101-110 dB HL of hearing loss using hearing aids, and they approached the scores predicted for a group of children with 90-100 dB HL of hearing loss using hearing aids
PMID: 9712131
ISSN: 1092-4388
CID: 67972
Malignant melanomas of the parotid [Meeting Abstract]
Wang, BY; Brandwein, M; Al-Naeif, NS
ISI:000071793400739
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 70503
Cervical sympathetic schwannoma [Letter]
Myssiorek, D
PMID: 9674535
ISSN: 0194-5998
CID: 73737
A mathematical model of consonant perception in adult cochlear implant users with the SPEAK strategy
Chapter by: Svirsky MA; Meyer TA
in: 16th International Congress on Acoustics and 135th Meeting Acoustical Society of America : the sound of the future : a global view of acoustics in the 21st century by Kuhl PK; Crum LA [Eds]
Woodbury NY : Acoustical Society of America, 1998
pp. 1981-1982
ISBN: 1563968142
CID: 5007
Efficient gene transfer to human squamous cell carcinomas by the herpes simplex virus type 1 amplicon vector
Carew, J F; Federoff, H; Halterman, M; Kraus, D H; Savage, H; Sacks, P G; Schantz, S P; Shah, J P; Fong, Y
BACKGROUND: This study evaluates the efficiency of herpes simplex virus (HSV) mediated gene transfer in human squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) cell lines in vitro and in vivo when delivered by selective intra-arterial perfusion. METHODS: Human head and neck SCC were exposed to HSV-LacZ and HSV-interleukin-2 (IL-2) and gene transfer and expression assessed by X-gal staining and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, respectively. Hamster cheek pouch tumors were perfused with HSV-LacZ or HSV-IL-2, by microcannulating the external carotid artery, and gene transfer determined. RESULTS: A ratio of 5 viral particles per tumor cell achieved gene transfer rates exceeding 50%. Interleukin-2 levels of 287 +/- 17 to 424 +/- 8.4 ng per million cells were achieved at a ratio of 2 viral particles per tumor cell. Selective intra-arterial perfusion of the HSV-IL-2 vector yielded IL-2 levels of 45.8 +/- 17.0 pg per g tumor. CONCLUSIONS: HSV amplicon vectors are efficient vehicles for gene transfer in vitro in human head and neck SCC cell lines and in vivo when introduced by selective intra-arterial perfusion
PMID: 9874422
ISSN: 0002-9610
CID: 137265
Commissural and lemniscal synaptic input to the gerbil inferior colliculus
Moore, D R; Kotak, V C; Sanes, D H
The central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC) receives direct inputs, bilaterally, from all auditory brain stem nuclear groups. To evaluate the contribution made to gerbil ICC neuron physiology by two major afferent pathways, we examined the synaptic responses evoked by direct stimulation of the commissure of the inferior colliculus (CIC) and the ipsilateral lateral lemniscus (LL). Frontal midbrain slices were obtained from postnatal day (P) 9-P19 gerbils, and whole cell recordings were made under current- (n = 22) or voltage-clamp (n = 52) conditions. Excitatory and inhibitory synaptic responses were characterized by sequentially exposing the slice to ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonists [6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) + aminophosphonpentanoic acid (AP-5), or kynurenic acid)], a gamma-aminobutryic acid type A receptor antagonist (bicuculline), and a glycine receptor antagonist (strychnine). In current clamp, LL stimulation typically produced a short latency depolarization followed by a longer duration hyperpolarization. The depolarization was abolished by AP-5 + CNQX, and the remaining inhibitory potential displayed either bicuculline or strychnine sensitivity. In voltage clamp, 79% of ICC neurons displayed synaptic currents after stimulation of each pathway. The synaptic currents were typically complex waveforms, and ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonists reduced inward currents at a holding potential of -80 mV in the majority of neurons. In addition, this treatment reduced outward synaptic currents at a holding potential of -20 mV, indicating that inhibitory interneuronal input was often activated by LL or CIC afferents. A minority of neurons had synaptic currents that were unaffected by glutamate receptor antagonists, but it was more common for CIC-evoked currents to be unaffected (38%) rather than LL-evoked currents (22%). The CIC provided a strong inhibitory input that was almost exclusively GABAergic, whereas the LL inhibition often included a glycinergic component. These experiments have shown that the CIC provides a major glutamatergic and GABAergic input to most ICC neurons. However, much of the inhibitory input from both the CIC and the LL appears to be mediated by interneuronal connections
PMID: 9819238
ISSN: 0022-3077
CID: 129658