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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three basic techniques (and one modified technique) were developed, allowing successful excision of subepiglottic cysts in 10 horses (5 Standardbreds, 4 Thoroughbreds, and 1 Quarter Horse; mean age, 3.5 years) via peroral approach. This approach eliminated the need for laryngotomy or pharyngotomy and reduced postoperative care. None of the cysts redeveloped. Clinical signs of disease before surgery included respiratory noise, exercise intolerance, coughing, and dysphagia and were eliminated in all horses except one that raced successfully, but in which some respiratory noise was detected. Peroral subepiglottic cyst excision was performed on anesthetized horses that were positioned in lateral recumbency and intubated via the nares and trachea. General anesthesia allowed careful intraoral palpation and endoscopic visualization of the oropharynx on a television monitor. Custom-designed instruments, including a guide tube, cyst snare, and long grasping forceps, facilitated either laser or snare, or laser and snare cyst excision. Hemorrhage was negligible in all horses. Initial attempts to develop a technique to submucosally excise subepiglottic cysts through a transnasal transendoscopic approach in conscious horses, using a contact neodymium:yttrium aluminum garnet laser, were unsuccessful. In each of 3 horses, the cyst was inadvertently penetrated before it could be excised, causing it to collapse and disappear beneath the soft palate. Postoperative complications were excessive subepiglottic swelling after laser excision (n = 1 horse), which resolved completely in response to anti-inflammatory treatment, and subepiglottic cicatrix formation after snare excision (n = 1 horse), which required surgical excision of the cicatrix.
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PMID:Evaluation of peroral transendoscopic contact neodymium:yttrium aluminum garnet laser and snare excision of subepiglottic cysts in horses. 206 Nov 80

The palliative effect of repeated endoscopic dilatation of malignant strictures of the esophagus and esophagogastric junction was prospectively evaluated in 41 patients. Dilatation was performed with Eder-Puestow technique in brief general anesthesia. Substantial improvement in swallowing ability was experienced after each treatment. The dysphagia recurred, however, and the dilatations were repeated at intervals of about 4 weeks. Most patients required less than or equal to three treatments during their remaining lifespan. There were few complications, the most prominent being perforation (in 5% of 128 sessions). Only short hospital stay was required, and 18 patients remained at home during the periods between dilatations. Endoscopic dilation of the esophagus and esophagogastric junction gives good palliation. The technique is simple, cheap and safe. It is suitable for lesions at any site, not time-consuming, available at almost all endoscopy units, and consequently to be recommended in this clinical setting.
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PMID:Palliative endoscopic dilatation in carcinoma of the esophagus and esophagogastric junction. 247 23

We have evaluated the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of laparoscopy under general anaesthesia, ultrasound and computed tomography (CT) in detecting intra-abdominal metastases in 90 consecutive patients with carcinoma of the oesophagus or cardia. Metastases were histologically confirmed as hepatic in 25 patients, nodal in 35 and peritoneal in nine. All investigations had high specificity (86-100 per cent) for each type of metastasis. Laparoscopy was found to be significantly more sensitive (P less than 0.01; P less than 0.02) and more accurate (P less than 0.01; P less than 0.01) than either ultrasound or CT, respectively, with regard to hepatic status. Although laparoscopy performed best with regard to nodal metastases, this reached statistical significance only when sensitivity of ultrasound was compared (P less than 0.01). Neither ultrasound nor CT detected any peritoneal metastases, although laparoscopy detected eight out of nine, giving a sensitivity of 89 per cent and an accuracy of 98 per cent. There was no morbidity or mortality associated with laparoscopy, which offers a safe, reliable method of determining intra-abdominal status and may obviate the need for surgery in some patients with malignant dysphagia.
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PMID:Laparoscopy, ultrasound and computed tomography in cancer of the oesophagus and gastric cardia: a prospective comparison for detecting intra-abdominal metastases. 253 50

A case of mediastinitis and left pyopneumothorax complicating a laryngeal phlegmon caused by Candida albicans is described. A 64-year-old woman was admitted complaining of pharyngeal pain, hoarseness, dysphagia, and pain behind the left angle of the mandible. In that hospital, she was diagnosed as having a laryngeal phlegmon. She was known to be diabetic and hypertensive since 54 years of age. After admission, she became dyspneic, and chest X-rays revealed left atelectasis, left pleural effusion and left pneumothorax. After a drain was inserted into the left thoracic cavity, she was transferred to our hospital. Chest X-rays showed widening of the mediastinum, an enlarged cardiac shadow, mediastinal emphysema, left pneumothorax and bilateral pleural effusion. A thoracic CT also showed extensive mediastinal emphysema. On March 19, 1988 we incised the abscess behind the left angle of the mandible and inserted drains into both the mediastinum and left thoracic cavity under general anesthesia. Candidiasis was diagnosed based on culture of pus obtained from the abscess behind the left angle of the mandible. She was treated with antibiotics intravenously and through both drainage tubes for about 1 month. She was cured and discharged after 5 months of hospitalization.
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PMID:[Mediastinitis and left pyopneumothorax complicating a laryngeal phlegmon]. 262 14

Nutritional assistance was indicated in 31 patients with an ENT tumour at different stages of treatment and different stages of the disease. These patients presented with disorders of deglutition with false passages (68%), aspiration pneumonia (10%), dysphagia (35%) or denutrition (17%). We used an endoscopic percutaneous gastrotomy kit produced by the Bioser company (pull technique). In 29 patients, the tube was inserted under general anaesthesia in the operating theatre to prevent dyspnoea during introduction of the tube in these patients with alteration of the airway-gastrointestinal tract junction or because the tube was inserted at the beginning of anaesthesia for ENT surgery. The tube was able to be inserted in every case, with cardiac arrest in one patient who was effectively resuscitated without sequelae, two obstructions of the cuff requiring advancement of the tube with a bougie, 2 ruptures of the thread and one case of dyspnoea. Two patients subsequently developed a wound abscess which was drained and one patient required removal of the tube. Follow-up of the patients demonstrated the good tolerance of this tube which was maintained for an average of 2.9 +/- 0.5 months (0.1 to 9 months) without any major complications. 3 benign wound infections, 4 inflammatory reactions, 4 minimal leaks, 1 case of hyperthermia, 12 cases of abdominal distension and 2 cases of displacement of the tube were observed. The weight gain was equal to 4%. The authors believe that this technique of endoscopic gastrostomy should be preferred to surgical gastrostomy.
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PMID:[Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy. Indications and results in 31 patients]. 271 44

The authors examined and followed 104 patients who had undergone surgery under endotracheal anesthesia in order to recognize the lesions of the oropharynx and the larynx resulting from intubation and other manipulations within the oral cavity and the pharynx. Laryngoscopic examination disclosed: a hematoma of true vocal cords in 5 patients, hematoma of the aditus ad laryngem and soft palate in 1 patient, edema in 4 patients, and in 8 patients hematoma of the oropharyngeal mucosa. The patients reported the following post-extubation discomforts: sore throat, hoarseness, dysphagia, a feeling of burning, clenching or foreign body in the throat, rough throat, irritation to hacking cough, and pains in the cervical musculature. Laryngitis was singled out as a disorder found in an increased percentage in the study group, as compared to the literature data, for which an explanation is given.
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PMID:[Intubation lesions of the oropharynx, larynx and trachea]. 273 96

Six patients with parapharyngeal space tumors presenting intraorally over the past 16 years were managed by transoral excision. All had benign tumors of salivary gland origin (1 monomorphic and 5 pleomorphic adenomas) and 3 of 6 patients were asymptomatic. There were no surgical complications and blood loss was minor in all cases. One patient, who had refused treatment for more than 40 years, presented with dyspnea and dysphagia, and required a tracheotomy for safe induction of anesthesia. Only one patient was hospitalized for more than 3 days and only one tumor recurred--as a malignant pleomorphic adenoma 3 years later.
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PMID:Transoral excision of lateral parapharyngeal space tumors presenting intraorally. 283 Apr 44

Otolaryngological manifestations were examined in a series of 250 patients diagnosed as having ALS between 1976 and 1986. Surgical intervention was only required in 10 cases due to excessive drooling and aspiration. Five patients had submandibular gland excisions with only limited improvement in respect to drooling. One case having a unilateral tympanic neurectomy had significantly better drooling control. Cricopharyngeal myotomy is helpful when dysphagia is predominantly due to cricopharyngeal spasm. In our series, tympanic neurectomy and chorda tympanectomy provide the better control of drooling for these patients and has the added advantage of being performed under local anesthesia.
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PMID:Otolaryngologic manifestations of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 334 21

Presented is a series of eight patients in whom neurologic sequelae developed after retrobulbar anesthesia. All patients demonstrated blockade of one or more cranial nerves and six progressed to apnea, requiring intubation and mechanical ventilation. Neurologic findings included amaurosis in the contralateral eye (5 patients), nonreactive pupil in the contralateral eye (6 patients), ductional defects (2 patients), and dysphagia (4 patients). In all cases, these findings resolved in 2 to 12 hours. In patients who progressed to apnea, spontaneous respiration resumed within 30 to 60 minutes. These findings are particularly significant in light of recent decisions to reduce anesthesia coverage for cataract surgery in some regions.
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PMID:Brain stem anesthesia after retrobulbar block. 362 22

51 patients with dysphagia caused by peptic oesophageal stricture due to primary or secondary reflux oesophagitis were treated by fibre-endoscope and Eder-Puestow dilatations under local anaesthesia and sedation, between 1976 and 1984. There was one death (2%) attributable to the procedure (perforation) and complications arose in three (6%) patients (perforation, pneumonia). The dilatation was successful in 96% but two patients (4%) had to be operated on because of undilatable stricture. Follow-up data was available for the other 44 patients for periods of one to eight (mean 2.8) years later. The stricture was cured by dilatation and antireflux treatment (conservative or operative) in all patients and 98% of them were able to eat solid food and improve their nutritional status. During follow-up 22 patients (50%) were asymptomatic and 22 (50%) had dysphagia or/and reflux symptoms. At endoscopy oesophagitis was healed with conservative or operative treatment in 25 patients (57%). It is concluded that fibre-endoscopic dilatation of peptic oesophageal strictures with the Eder-Puestow system combined with conservative or operative antireflux treatment, is a simple and safe procedure and gives good results in almost all patients. Surgical procedures aimed at total correction of the stricture are indicated only rarely in intractable cases.
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PMID:Fibre-endoscopic dilatation of peptic oesophageal strictures. 366 Oct 38


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