Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Optimal techniques for the preoperative assessment and intraoperative management of the petrous carotid artery remain undefined. While purposeful "avoidance" of this structure may result in partial tumor removal, limited exposure of the petrous carotid artery may lead to inadvertent injury with life-threatening neurovascular sequelae. Twenty-five cases are reported in which surgical manipulation of the petrous carotid artery was necessary to accomplish total tumor removal or gain operative exposure to the skull base. A standard diagnostic radiographic assessment consisted of high-resolution computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and a 4-vessel angiography. Preoperative balloon occlusion of the involved internal carotid artery was performed in four patients. Surgical approaches used in this series were broadly classified as: infratemporal-anterolateral (14), pterional-infratemporal (6), or pterional-anterolateral (5). Intraoperative management of the carotid artery consisted of total decompression in 19 cases, decompression with mobilization in four patients, and resection in two instances. Major neurovascular complications included one stroke and death caused by arterial occlusion, one stroke and death caused by arterial spasm, one stroke caused by brain edema, and one death related to a postoperative carotid hemorrhage. Other nonvascular complications included brain swelling, cranial nerve palsies, dysphagia, ataxia, cerebrospinal fluid fistulae, flap necrosis with wound infection, and pneumocephalus. Invasive and noninvasive methods are outlined for the preoperative assessment of the petrous carotid in cases of advanced skull base disease and intraoperative management options are detailed.
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PMID:The perioperative management of the petrous carotid artery in contemporary surgery of the skull base. 211 30

Cancers of the paranasal sinuses and nasal cavity are the most common malignant tumors of the anterior and anterolateral skull base. The treatment of these tumors affecting the skull base is complex due to the significant anatomical features. We examined 25 patients, 17 males and 8 females with mean age 61 +/- 2 years. En bloc resections using anterior skull base resection, orbital resection, middle fossa resection, and combined procedures of these three resections were performed. Using a combination of adjuvant radiation and chemotherapy, we have achieved a 2-year disease-free survival rate of 90% in these cases. However, potential complications include cerebrospinal fluid leakage, meningitis, abscess formation, pneumocephalus, frontal brain contusion, trismus, and dysphagia as a functional complication. We believe that the optimal management of such malignant tumors involves a multimodal and multidisciplinary team approach. Here we present our recent institutional experience and treatment policy employed during the past 3 years.
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PMID:Operative management of skull base malignant tumors arising from the nasal cavity and paranasal sinus: recent strategies used in 25 cases. 2009 20

Pneumocephalus is a rare complication of esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD), but existing literature does not discuss pneumocephalus surrounding endoscopic food bolus retrieval. We present a death involving pneumocephalus complicating endoscopic food removal from the esophagus. A 40-year-old man presented with dysphagia and suprasternal discomfort 12 hours following chicken ingestion. On flexible endoscopy, chicken was visualized in the distal esophagus. After successful retrieval, a mucosal laceration was noted where the chicken had been lodged. He was unarousable following the procedure and was emergently transported to a hospital, where computed tomography scanning showed pneumocephalus. He was later declared brain dead. The case was referred for medicolegal autopsy. The brain was examined first, revealing rare air bubbles within meningeal vessels and numerous, diffuse petechiae-like hemorrhages within the brain parenchyma. The esophageal mucosa had focal discoloration and a partial thickness laceration; microscopic examination revealed eosinophilic esophagitis. Eosinophilic esophagitis is a known risk factor for food bolus impaction and should be suspected in such patients. Pneumocephalus is a rare possible complication of EGD for food bolus retrieval. In patients unresponsive after endoscopy, radiographic detection of potential pneumocephalus should be encouraged to enable timely therapy and improved outcomes, or to supplement autopsy in the event of patient death. Forensic pathologists should understand that pneumocephalus is a potential mechanism of injury/death in patients experiencing esophageal trauma, including injury incurred during EGD.
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PMID:Death Resulting from Pneumocephalus Complicating Endoscopic Food Bolus Retrieval in a Patient with Eosinophilic Esophagitis. 3123 42