Otolaryngology--head and neck surgery : official journal of American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
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Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg · Mar 1997
Comparative StudyA comparison of mucosal incisions made by scalpel, CO2 laser, electrocautery, and constant-voltage electrocautery.
This study compares the histologic effects of scalpel, CO2 laser, electrosurgery, and constant-voltage electrosurgery incisions on the mucosal tissue of swine. Tissue studies comparing the CO2 laser with the scalpel and electrosurgery have been done. However, a gross and histologic comparison of the effects of all three techniques on oral mucosal tissue has not been reported. ⋯ The wounds created by all four instruments displayed intact epithelium by 4 weeks, and granulation tissue peaked at 4 weeks with all methods except constant-voltage electrosurgery, where granulation tissue was still prevalent at week 6. Constant-voltage electrosurgery and the CO2 laser provided the best combination of ease of use, hemostasis, and lack of tissue injury among the instruments compared. Incisions and excisions made with constant-voltage electrosurgery required less time than those made with the laser, but constant-voltage electrosurgery wounds also had significantly more granulation tissue in later weeks of the study, suggesting that wound healing may be delayed.
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Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg · Mar 1997
Stretch-induced nerve injury as a cause of paralysis secondary to the anterior cervical approach.
The anterior approach to the cervical spine, first described 40 years ago, has become a popular and widely used procedure by spine surgeons to expose the anterior vertebral bodies from C3 to T1. A significant complication of this procedure is transient or permanent ipsilateral recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis. In a previous review at our institution of patients with hoarseness after an anterior cervical approach, 15 of 16 patients demonstrated right-sided paralysis. ⋯ The right-sided approach to C7 resulted in an average in situ stretch on the ipsilateral recurrent laryngeal nerve of 12% and 24%, with 3 cm and 4 cm of Cloward retraction, respectively. The right-sided approach to C4 resulted in significant levels of stretch in 3 (30%) of 10 cadavers and no stretch in 7 (70%) of 10 cadavers. The relevance of these data is demonstrated by the review of numerous studies demonstrating the potential for significant neural damage with nerve stretch greater than 12%.
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Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg · Jul 1996
Biography Historical ArticleFacial plastic surgery: subspecialty helps otolaryngology define its boundaries.
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Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg · Jun 1996
Videolaryngoscopic evaluation of laryngeal intubation injury: incidence and predictive factors.
Bedside videolaryngoscopy of 73 cardiovascular surgical patients was performed before and after intubation to identify risk factors, incidence, and site of injury to the larynx. Nineteen of 44 patients with abnormal preintubation examination findings had granulation tissue present on a vocal process, compared With 3 of 20 patients who had normal findings on preintubation examination (p < 0.05). ⋯ Videolaryngoscopy provides a high-quality permanent record of the laryngeal examination and is easily obtained in the critical care setting. Preintubation videolaryngeal evaluation may identify those at risk for more significant intubation injury.
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Gunshot wounds to the head and neck in the pediatric population have become alarmingly common. They often result in death of the victim, devastate families, and inflict a considerable financial burden to hospitals and society. We present a retrospective study of cases treated at a level I trauma center in Houston, Texas, from July 1990 to July 1993. ⋯ The most common type of weapon was the .22 caliber pistol, which caused four of the deaths. Two of our cases involved BB air rifles, one of which mandated a craniotomy for the evacuation of an epidural hematoma. Our findings indicate that gunshot wounds to head and neck in children are in most instances preventable and result in high fatality rates because of common intracranial involvement, even when low-energy missiles are used.