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Long-term intubation and high rate of tracheostomy in COVID-19 patients might determine an unprecedented increase of airway stenoses: a call to action from the European Laryngological Society

Piazza, Cesare; Filauro, Marta; Dikkers, Frederik G; Nouraei, S A Reza; Sandu, Kishore; Sittel, Christian; Amin, Milan R; Campos, Guillermo; Eckel, Hans E; Peretti, Giorgio
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:The novel Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, may need intensive care unit (ICU) admission in up to 12% of all positive cases for massive interstitial pneumonia, with possible long-term endotracheal intubation for mechanical ventilation and subsequent tracheostomy. The most common airway-related complications of such ICU maneuvers are laryngotracheal granulomas, webs, stenosis, malacia and, less commonly, tracheal necrosis with tracheo-esophageal or tracheo-arterial fistulae. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:This paper gathers the opinions of experts of the Laryngotracheal Stenosis Committee of the European Laryngological Society, with the aim of alerting the medical community about the possible rise in number of COVID-19-related laryngotracheal stenosis (LTS), and the aspiration of paving the way to a more rationale concentration of these cases within referral specialist airway centers. RESULTS:A range of prevention strategies, diagnostic work-up, and therapeutic approaches are reported and framed within the COVID-19 pandemic context. CONCLUSIONS:One of the most important roles of otolaryngologists when encountering airway-related signs and symptoms in patients with previous ICU hospitalization for COVID-19 is to maintain a high level of suspicion for LTS development, and share it with colleagues and other health care professionals. Such a condition requires specific expertise and should be comprehensively managed in tertiary referral centers.
PMCID:7275663
PMID: 32506145
ISSN: 1434-4726
CID: 4510402

Transcervical arterial ligation for prevention of postoperative hemorrhage in transoral oropharyngectomy: Systematic review and meta-analysis

Sharbel, Daniel D; Abkemeier, Mary; Sullivan, James; Zimmerman, Zach; Albergotti, William G; Duvvuri, Umamaheswar; Byrd, James Kenneth
BACKGROUND:Transcervical arterial ligation has been studied as a useful procedure to prevent bleeding events after transoral robotic surgery (TORS). METHODS:A systematic review of English-language literature on arterial ligation in TORS from 2005 to 2019 was conducted using Cochrane, PubMed, Web of Science (WoS), and ScienceDirect databases. Studies evaluating ligation and rates of postoperative hemorrhage were included. Meta-analysis of included studies was performed to assess impact of ligation on postoperative hemorrhage. RESULTS:Five studies with 2008 patients were included. History of radiation (odds ratio [OR] = 2.26, P = .02) and advanced tumor stage (OR = 1.93, P = .02) were found to predispose patients to postoperative hemorrhage. Arterial ligation was protective against severe hemorrhage in the mixed primary surgical modality cohort (OR = 0.33, P = .03) and in the TORS-only subgroup (OR = 0.21, P = .02), but did not significantly impact overall odds of postoperative hemorrhage. CONCLUSION:Transcervical arterial ligation offers protection against major/severe postoperative hemorrhage in patients undergoing TORS. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE:II.
PMID: 32974970
ISSN: 1097-0347
CID: 5482182

Completion thyroidectomy-Have we made appropriate decisions? [Editorial]

Shaha, Ashok R; Patel, Kepal N; Michael Tuttle, R
PMID: 33098667
ISSN: 1096-9098
CID: 4652102

Melanoma metastatic to the hyoid bone [Case Report]

Ryan, John F; Xie, Deborah X; Eytan, Danielle F; McCarthy, Edward F; Mandal, Rajarsi; Gourin, Christine G; Lipson, Evan J; Meyer, Christian F; Vosler, Peter S
Metastatic melanoma may be included in the differential diagnosis of hyoid masses in patients with a history of melanoma. Hyoid resection is well tolerated and of diagnostic and therapeutic benefit in patients with tumors metastatic to the hyoid bone.
PMCID:7813091
PMID: 33489207
ISSN: 2050-0904
CID: 5005562

Commentary on "Medicare Reform of Hospital Payment for Inpatient Facial Plastic Procedures" by Kondamuri et al [Comment]

Lafer, Marissa P; Buckingham, Edward D
PMID: 33351696
ISSN: 2689-3622
CID: 5054362

Malignant transformation of a polymorphous low grade neuroepithelial tumor of the young (PLNTY) [Case Report]

Bale, Tejus A; Sait, Sameer F; Benhamida, Jamal; Ptashkin, Ryan; Haque, Sofia; Villafania, Liliana; Sill, Martin; Sadowska, Justyna; Akhtar, Razia B; Liechty, Benjamin; Juthani, Rupa; Ladanyi, Marc; Fowkes, Mary; Karajannis, Matthias A; Rosenblum, Marc K
PMCID:8493813
PMID: 33226472
ISSN: 1432-0533
CID: 5352952

The Perception of Ramped Pulse Shapes in Cochlear Implant Users

Navntoft, Charlotte Amalie; Landsberger, David M; Barkat, Tania Rinaldi; Marozeau, Jeremy
The electric stimulation provided by current cochlear implants (CI) is not power efficient. One underlying problem is the poor efficiency by which information from electric pulses is transformed into auditory nerve responses. A novel stimulation paradigm using ramped pulse shapes has recently been proposed to remedy this inefficiency. The primary motivation is a better biophysical fit to spiral ganglion neurons with ramped pulses compared to the rectangular pulses used in most contemporary CIs. Here, we tested the hypotheses that ramped pulses provide more efficient stimulation compared to rectangular pulses and that a rising ramp is more efficient than a declining ramp. Rectangular, rising ramped and declining ramped pulse shapes were compared in terms of charge efficiency and discriminability, and threshold variability in seven CI listeners. The tasks included single-channel threshold detection, loudness-balancing, discrimination of pulse shapes, and threshold measurement across the electrode array. Results showed that reduced charge, but increased peak current amplitudes, was required at threshold and most comfortable levels with ramped pulses relative to rectangular pulses. Furthermore, only one subject could reliably discriminate between equally-loud ramped and rectangular pulses, suggesting variations in neural activation patterns between pulse shapes in that participant. No significant difference was found between rising and declining ramped pulses across all tests. In summary, the present findings show some benefits of charge efficiency with ramped pulses relative to rectangular pulses, that the direction of a ramped slope is of less importance, and that most participants could not perceive a difference between pulse shapes.
PMCID:8724057
PMID: 34935552
ISSN: 2331-2165
CID: 5147212

Sinus Endoscopic Surgery

Chapter by: Homsi, Marie Therese; Gaffey, Megan M.
in: StatPearls by
Tresure Island FL : StatPearls, 2021
pp. -
ISBN:
CID: 5032182

Cochlear Implantation in Infants: Evidence of Safety

Deep, Nicholas L; Purcell, Patricia L; Gordon, Karen A; Papsin, Blake C; Roland, J Thomas; Waltzman, Susan B
The aim of this study was to investigate surgical, anesthetic, and device-related complications associated with cochlear implantation (CI) in children younger than 1 year of age. This was a multicenter, retrospective chart review of all children with severe-to-profound sensorineural hearing loss who underwent cochlear implantation with a Cochlear Nucleus Implant System before 1 year of age. Endpoints included perioperative course, major and minor surgical, anesthetic and device-related complications, and 30-day readmission rates. One hundred thirty-six infants (242 ears) met criteria. The mean age at implantation was 9.4 months (standard deviation 1.8). Six-month follow-up was reported in all patients. There were no major anesthetic or device-related complications. Adverse events were reported in 34 of implanted ears (14%; 7 major, 27 minor). Sixteen adverse events occurred ≤30 days of surgery, and 18 occurred >30 days of surgery. The 30-day readmission rate was 1.5%. The rate of adverse events did not correlate with preexisting medical comorbidities or duration under anesthesia. There was no significant difference detected in complication rate for patients younger than 9 months of age versus those 9 to 11 months of age. This study demonstrates the safety of CI surgery in infants and supports reducing the indication for cochlear implantation to younger than 1 year of age for children with bilateral, profound sensorineural hearing loss obtaining a Cochlear Nucleus Implant System.
PMID: 34028328
ISSN: 2331-2165
CID: 4887552

Epidemiologic factors in patients with advanced head and neck cancer treated with radiation therapy

Brennan, Michael T; Treister, Nathaniel S; Sollecito, Thomas P; Schmidt, Brian L; Patton, Lauren L; Yang, Yi; Lin, Alexander; Elting, Linda S; Hodges, James S; Lalla, Rajesh V
BACKGROUND:Approximately 50% of patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) initially were seen with advanced disease. We aimed to evaluate the association of epidemiologic factors with advanced HNC at diagnosis. METHODS:The OraRad multicenter prospective cohort study enrolled HNC patients receiving curative-intent radiation therapy. Factors assessed for association with advanced HNC presentation at diagnosis included demographics, social and medical history, cancer characteristics, human papilloma virus (HPV) status, and dental disease measures. RESULTS:We enrolled 572 participants; 77% male and mean (SD) age of 61.7 (11.2) years. Oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas (88% HPV-related) were seen with smaller tumors, but more frequent nodal involvement. Private medical insurance and no Medicaid were associated with smaller tumors. A higher dental disease burden was associated with larger tumors. CONCLUSIONS:Insurance status, cancer type/location, and dental disease are associated with advanced HNC and may represent potentially modifiable factors or factors to be considered in the screening process of new lesions.
PMID: 32991009
ISSN: 1097-0347
CID: 4651712