ORL; journal for oto-rhino-laryngology and its related specialties
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ORL J. Otorhinolaryngol. Relat. Spec. · Jan 1984
Benign paroxysmal vertigo in childhood: a migraine equivalent.
The two main problems in defining and classifying the syndrome of benign paroxysmal vertigo (BPV) in childhood are the vestibular function pattern and the relationship between BPV and migraine. 13 children suffering from this syndrome were submitted to complete otoneurological examination, including caloric and rotational labyrinthine stimulation with ENG recording, and to headache provocation tests with nitroglycerin, histamine and fenfluramine. Vestibular responses were normal in all except 2 cases which presented signs of central vestibular impairment at the level of the vestibulocerebellar pathways. Headache provocation tests were positive in 9 out of 10 children, and in 4 cases they induced a typical vertiginous attack instead of headache. ⋯ During the follow-up period, some children responded positively to migraine treatment. BPV, like paroxysmal torticollis in infancy and the signs of the periodic syndrome, can be considered a migraine equivalent or a migraine precursor and could be due to the same vascular and/or biochemical mechanisms responsible for the migraine. In children, for anatomical or developmental reasons, these mechanisms could selectively affect parts of the brain stem, including the vestibular nuclei and vestibulocerebellar pathways.
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ORL J. Otorhinolaryngol. Relat. Spec. · Jan 1981
Conditions of clinical recovery from partial facial palsy caused by injury to a branch of the facial nerve.
This study was conducted to elucidate the pattern of clinical recovery from partial facial palsy caused by injury to a branch of the facial nerve in rabbits. In the experiment, the state of recovery from palsy was investigated by observing the movement of the m. orbicularis oris of the rabbit at the time of food intake, as well as by observing the evoked wave and muscle contraction caused by nerve stimulation, and the muscle contraction caused by muscle stimulation. Recovery from peripheral facial nerve palsy is complete within 1 month after nerve impairment if over half of the nerve fibers of the impaired nerve are maintained intact without degeneration.
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ORL J. Otorhinolaryngol. Relat. Spec. · Jan 1979
Cryosurgery and laser surgery in the treatment of malignant and benign laryngeal processes.
Cryosurgery of the larynx is still in the stage of development. In the treatment of laryngeal papillomas cryosurgery has been quite successful. The use of cryosurgery in laryngo-hypopharyngeal carcinoma and in laryngeal stenosis is still restricted to special indications (old age, risk patients). ⋯ This is followed by the description of the different indications for laser surgery in the larynx. A chordectomy and the opening of a subglottic stenosis with the laser beam are described and documented with photographs. Finally, there is an outlook to an eventually broader spectrum of indications for laser surgery in the field of ent.