Clinical otolaryngology and allied sciences
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Clin Otolaryngol Allied Sci · Feb 1993
Nasal capnography in children: automated analysis provides a measure of obstruction during sleep.
A detailed analysis was made of nasal capnograms obtained from sleeping children with differing degrees of sleep-induced respiratory obstruction, the severe form being known as obstructive sleep apnoea. Clinical observations of these children were compared with analyses of nasal capnography data. ⋯ In comparison, measures of end-tidal carbon dioxide concentration proved to be a very insensitive index of the degree of obstruction. The conclusion is that the usefulness of nasal capnography in predicting and grading obstruction can easily be extended by the use of statistical measures of dispersion and that this concept warrants further work.
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Clin Otolaryngol Allied Sci · Dec 1992
Ingested foreign bodies: patient-guided localization is a useful clinical tool.
We prospectively studied the latest 60 patients who presented to the ENT Departments of St Mary's and St George's Hospitals with ingested foreign bodies. Localization of the foreign body by the patient was compared to the actual site of the foreign body at removal and graded accordingly. Localization was better the higher the object. ⋯ This suggests that for a patient who is able to lateralize a presumptive foreign body within the cervical region, then that object is likely to be above cricopharyngeus and on the side indicated. Further, it is likely to be visible on indirect laryngoscopy and amenable to removal in the casualty department. We hypothesize that the pharyngeal innervation by the vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves provides better sensation than in the oesophagus which is innervated less densely by the vagus and cervical sympathetic nerves.
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Plain radiographs are often taken to localize fishbones which lodge in the pharynx. In this study a pig's neck was used to determine the radio-opacity of 14 different species of fishbones. Radiographs were taken with bones placed in up to four of the common sites of impaction and assessed on two occasions independently by two previously uninvolved ENT consultants. ⋯ The most opaque bones were cod, haddock, grey mullet and lemon sole. The site most often detected was the laryngopharynx and that most often missed was the tonsil. This study is clinically relevant because it is useful to know which species of fishbone are radio-opaque when clinical examination fails to reveal a foreign body and may clarify the decision to proceed to endoscopy.
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Clin Otolaryngol Allied Sci · Aug 1992
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialManipulation of the fractured nose under local anaesthesia.
Simple fractures of the nasal pyramid without significant septal deformity may be reduced as effectively under local as under general anaesthesia. Currently, the former may involve regional nerve blockade by intranasal infiltration and is often unpleasant. We have attempted to find a more acceptable method. ⋯ The surgeon recorded the cosmetic result. Analysis revealed the internal route to be significantly more painful (P less than 0.001) and with no advantage to the patient with respect to post-operative airway patency or cosmesis. We recommend the technically easier external method for this procedure.
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A prospective study of otitis externa in the district of South Bedfordshire was undertaken between October 1990 and January 1991. Patients were referred untreated by general practitioners; self-referred patients with external otitis were also included. ⋯ Regular swimming emerged as a significant factor in the aetiology of otitis externa. The commonest organism cultured was Pseudomonas aeruginosa and this accounted for the most severe cases seen.