The Laryngoscope
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A distinct entity of airway obstruction from epiglottic and base-of-tongue (EBT) prolapse in the pediatric population is defined. Laryngopharyngeal findings, swallowing dysfunction, and gastroesophageal reflux disease are described in a group of children with EBT prolapse. A new grading system is also presented. ⋯ The new grading system was applied successfully to describe the severity and sites of airway obstruction in 14 children with EBT prolapse. Swallowing dysfunction and gastroesophageal reflux disease occur in this population. Although surgical therapies are sometimes effective, lack of consistent success and the risk of aspiration with procedures other than tracheotomy may lead some to conclude that continuous positive airway pressure or tracheotomy are the safest options.
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As otolaryngologists, we are the first consulted for stridor and dysphagia. One must consider both extrinsic and intrinsic etiologies in the differential diagnosis of these symptoms. ⋯ Traditional teaching is that surgery is rarely indicated for DISH of the cervical spine. Recommendations regarding the role of surgery as well as a review of our surgical experience are discussed.
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Historical Article
The Edwin Smith Papyrus: the birth of analytical thinking in medicine and otolaryngology.
The Edwin Smith Papyrus, discovered in 1862 outside of Luxor, Egypt, is the oldest known surgical text in the history of civilization. The surviving scroll, a copy of an earlier text from around 3,000 B. C., gives us remarkable insight into the medical practice of ancient Egyptians in the Nile River bed during the dawn of civilization. ⋯ Many of the concepts physicians and patients today take as common knowledge originated in the Edwin Smith Papyrus. The authors attempt to uncover some of these fundamental ideas and trace them through time until their incorporation in our modern medical knowledge base. It is the rational, logical, and advanced thinking exhibited in the Edwin Smith Papyrus that mandates its respect from modern otolaryngologists and all physicians alike.
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Commercial preparations of intranasal zinc gluconate gel are marketed as a remedy for the common cold. However, intranasal zinc has been reported as a cause of anosmia in humans and animals. Seventeen patients presenting with anosmia after the use of intranasal zinc gluconate are described. ⋯ The zinc-induced anosmia syndrome, characterized by squirt, sniff, burn, and anosmia, occurs after the exposure of olfactory epithelium to zinc cation. It can be distinguished from postviral anosmia based on history.