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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The patient was a 20-year-old female who complained of hoarseness and dysphagia. Chest X-ray showed bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy. Sarcoidosis was diagnosed histologically on the basis of granuloma without necrosis, by transbronchial lung biopsy (TBLB). Bronchofiberscopic findings revealed no granuloma of the vocal cords. Examination of the central nervous system with MRI identified no abnormalities. Hoarseness and dysphagia were thought to have been caused by glossopharyngeal and vagus nerve paresis. These signs improved markedly after two weeks of steroid therapy. This is a rare case of sarcoidosis associated with glossopharyngeal & vagus nerve paresis.
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PMID:[A case of sarcoidosis presenting with hoarseness and dysphagia due to glossopharyngeal and vagus nerve paresis]. 808 51

Esophagectomy without opening the thoracic cavity--transhiatal esophagectomy--(THE) were performed in 47 patients with malignant tumors localized at various levels of the esophagus. Pulmonary function studies were performed in all patients and they are categorized as low, moderate, or high risk for probable postoperative pulmonary complications according to the risk category system. Nine of these patients were classified as high risk, seven as moderate risk, and the rest as low risk. In all patients but four, reconstruction was accomplished by using their stomachs as a substitute. In the remaining patient, intestinal continuity was established by a left and right colonic interposition. Three patients were lost in the early postoperative period. Two patients categorized as low risk died from pulmonary thromboembolism and cardiac failure, respectively. One patient categorized in the high risk group died of coronary thrombosis. Postoperative complications included transient hoarseness due to recurrent laryngeal nerve paresis in one patient, right pleural effusion in one patient, pneumothorax in two patients, and thrombophlebitis in one patient. In the high risk patient group, there were no pulmonary complications. This clinical study demonstrated the protective effect of THE in patients with serious pulmonary problems.
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PMID:Transhiatal esophagectomy for esophageal carcinoma in Turkey: with special reference to respiratory function. 829 63

In order to evaluate complications due to cervical spine surgery using the anterior cervical approach a prospective study was conducted on 125 patients. ENT examination with the fibroscope was employed for all the patients before the procedure. The patients were operated on under general anesthesia and were intubated with an armoured tube, and then were placed in an intensive care unit for 24 hours. Assessment of deglutition and an ENT examination were performed the day after surgery. Before surgery, two cases of vocal cord paralysis were noted. 111 patients (88.8%) presented with subjective disorders: problems such as sore throat, odynophagia, dysphagia, dysphagia with overspill and hoarseness were respectively noted in 55 (44%), 34 (27.2%), 32 (25.6%), 11 (8.8%) and 13 (10.4%) cases. Dyspnoea was found in 2 cases (1.6%). 117 patients (93.6%) presented postoperative anomalies which were found on the posterolateral pharyngeal wall, on the arytenoids and on posterior third of the vocal cords. Inflammatory and/or swollen lesions were slight, moderate, significant or very significant in respectively 22.4%, 22.4%, 15.2% and 1.6% of cases. Very significant circumferential swelling of the pharyngeal wall and of the arytenoids was responsible for two cases of respiratory distress, and the patients required reintubation and return to theatre. Severe pharyngeal lesion correlated with duration of surgery (r = 0.20; p < 0.05), with the number levels of fusion (r = 0.02; p < 0.02) and with the age of the patient (p < 0.02). Six patients presented problems of mobility of the vocal cords: 3 had a right vocal cord paresis which was temporary and 3 had paralysis, also on the right but which persisted. There were no other complications. It is concluded that (i) ENT complications are frequently found in postoperative cervical spine surgery using the anterior cervical approach, some of them being severe. An ENT examination must be performed before the procedure for legal reasons. It is also recommended in the postoperative period in the case of discomfort; (ii) patients need to be placed in an intensive care unit during for the first 24 hours (iii). This study needs to be attended over more patients (iv) comparison with a control group of patients having non cervical surgery and intubated in the same way is needed to differentiate lesions related to surgery or intubation.
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PMID:[A prospective study of ENT complication following surgery of the cervical spine by the anterior approach (preliminary results)]. 977 50

Unilateral vocal cord paralysis or the loss of vocal cord tissue results in incomplete glottic closure (internal-paresis) with a consequent hoarseness and poor voice quality. Improving glottic incompetence, instead of the previously used paraffin, teflon is a widely accepted and most commonly used substance at present for vocal cord medialization. Using intracordal teflon injection of for decades had proven that it has limitations and potential complications to the human body. Beside the well-known external "phono-surgical" methods, a wide interest has been shown in endolaryngeal phono-surgery and in finding the ideal and most available biocompatible substances for the procedure. Papers have been issued about the promising results of autologus fat injection for medialization of the paralyzed vocal fold in the early '90s. In this paper the authors report on their slightly modified endolaryngeal intracordal autologus fat injection procedure, and its promising results. The first three patients (a left side glottic paralysis, a bilateral internal paresis and a left side internal paresis) experienced an improvement in their voice right after the medialization procedure, what remained the same during the 11 months follow-up period. Using supraglottic jet ventilation during general anaesthesia provides very good access to the operating field. Monitoring of neuro-muscular block makes possible an intraoperative examination of glottic closure by the protective reflex of the larynx. Incouraged by this initial results the authors suggest the autologus fat as an easy available, ideal substance for increasing (augmenting) the loss of vocal cord tissue.
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PMID:[Endolaryngeal lipoaugmentation of the vocal cords]. 1076 23

At the Georgetown University Center for the Voice, 778 patients were referred for evaluation between July 1, 1990, and June 30, 1995. During this 5-year period, right true vocal fold paralysis or paresis was diagnosed in 24 of these patients (3%). Videostroboscopy, voice analysis, and patient records were reviewed. Ages ranged from 23 to 80 years, and sex distribution approximated a 1:1 ratio. The patients presenting symptoms included hoarseness, dysphagia, choking, voice pitch change, voice weakness, fatigability, and breathiness. Sources of the vocal fold dysfunction included iatrogenic, traumatic, central, and infectious causes.
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PMID:Unilateral true vocal fold paralysis: cause of right-sided lesions. 1079 45

We report a 51-year-old man with mild left central facial palsy and left Avellis' syndrome due to a small medullary infarction. On admission, neurological examination revealed hoarseness, dysphasia, absent left gag reflex, palsies of the left vocal cord and left soft palate, and hypalgesia and thermohypesthesia on the right side of the trunk and extremities. In addition, he had a mild left central facial palsy. He had no nausea, vomiting, vertigo, hiccups, nystagmus, Horner's sign, facial numbness, or paresis or ataxia of the limbs. A T2 weighted MRI showed a small, high signal intensity area in the left dorsal region of the medulla and this lesion was presumed to involve the nucleus ambiguus and a part of the spinothalamic tract. These findings suggest that an aberrant supranuclear pathway, looping around the nucleus ambiguus to the facial nucleus exists in our patient.
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PMID:[A case of Avellis' syndrome with ipsilateral central facial palsy due to a small medullary infarction]. 1096 64

Fewer than 5% of all adults will have a palpable thyroid nodule, but this is still a large number of individuals who require evaluation. Although most thyroid nodules are a result of a benign disease process (more than 95%), the possibility of thyroid cancer is always a consideration. Important aspects of history taking with a patient in whom a thyroid nodule has been noted include age, gender, family history of thyroid or endocrine disease, prior low dosage head and neck radiation, recent hoarseness, dysphagia, and symptoms of hypermetabolism. Key features of evaluation by physical examination are the size and location of the thyroid abnormality, the degree of firmness of the nodule, the presence of other nodules in the thyroid, palpable cervical lymph nodes, vocal cord paresis or paralysis, and tachycardia and/or tremor. The major categories of thyroid abnormality in such patients include cysts, adenomas, thyroiditis, and cancer. Although radionuclide scans, ultrasound examination and computer tomography have all been employed in the assessment of thyroid nodules, and thyroid stimulating hormone assay is useful for confirming a euthyroid state, fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) has proved to be the most efficient diagnostic tool. The findings from FNAB allow avoidance of operative treatment for a large portion of these patients with palpable thyroid nodules, but a diagnosis of "follicular neoplasm" on FNAB usually requires operation, despite the fact that many such patients do ultimately prove to have a benign lesion. The extent of operation in patients undergoing surgery will depend on the diagnostic findings before operation, but unilateral thyroid lobectomy is the minimum procedure when surgery is required.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of patients with thyroid nodules. 1211 99

Numerous internal diseases can express themselves in the form of ENT manifestations. Epistaxis is one of the most common emergencies seen by the ENT specialist. Possible underlying systemic etiologies may be hypertension, systemic anticoagulation or even rare entities such as hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia. Internal-medical conditions underlying hoarseness are usually injuries to the recurrent nerve with lesions of the thyroid gland and mediastinum being prominent. Modern electrophysiological techniques permit early prognostication of the chances of healing a vocal cord paresis. A number of surgical procedures for improving vocal problems in the treatment of irreversible paresis are available. Unclear cervical swellings prompt a wide range of possible differential diagnoses that differ dramatically in terms of both treatment and outcome. For this reason, a rational, interdisciplinary diagnostic work-up is essential. In light of the risk of delaying the diagnosis and worsening the outcome, uncritical primary sampling of such tissue must be avoided.
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PMID:[Hereditary telangiectasia, recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis, tumor in the neck area. When you need the expertise of an ENT specialist]. 1238 Mar 36

Arytenoid subluxation is a well-known cause of hoarseness due to incomplete glottic closure with intact inferior laryngeal nerves after severe laryngeal trauma. We report the case of a young man presenting after laryngeal blunt trauma with hoarseness, easy fatigue during phonation, marked difficulty with his high-pitch and singing voice and decreased phonation time, but intact function of both inferior laryngeal nerves, intact endolaryngeal mucosa sensibility and normal CT scans of the larynx and the neck. Due to the asymmetric anteromedial position of the right arytenoid with incomplete glottic closure, the primary diagnosis was arytenoid subluxation, and the patient was referred for instantaneous relocation therapy. The stroboscopic and electromyographic diagnosis of a unilateral paresis of the external branch of the right superior laryngeal nerve caused the therapy to be changed. Without repositioning, the patient had a total recovery of voice quality when the paresis receded 2 months later. In conclusion, the unilateral paresis of the external branch of the superior laryngeal nerve after laryngeal blunt trauma is reported here for the first time. Although the clinical findings are familiar sequelae of thyroid surgery, they may be misdiagnosed as arytenoid subluxation after laryngeal blunt trauma. Stroboscopy and electromyography permitted the correct diagnosis.
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PMID:Hoarseness after laryngeal blunt trauma: a differential diagnosis between an injury to the external branch of the superior laryngeal nerve and an arytenoid subluxation. A case report and literature review. 1288 52

Unilateral paresis of 9th-11th cranial nerves together is defined as jugular foramen (Vernet's) syndrome. A cholesteatoma case that penetrated into intracranial area after eroding temporal bone and led to jugular foramen syndrome is presented here, since such a case has not been reported in the literature hitherto. A 46-year-old male patient was evaluated for hoarseness. It was learnt from his anamnesis that he had been operated for otitis media nearly 20 years ago. Uvula deviated towards right. Loss of gag reflex was remarkable on the left. Paresis was found on the left vocal cord. There was weakness in rotation of the head to the right. Computerized tomography (CT) scan revealed that the temporal bone lost its integrity and that there was an extra-axial hypodense mass neighboring pontocerebellum. Post-contrast magnetic resonance imaging showed that the mass, which showed thin, regular circular contrasting and which was hypointense in T1-weighted MR and hyperintense in T2-weighted MR, extended to the left jugular foramen. The mass was totally removed with left sub-occipital approach in the treatment. After the treatment, hoarseness, weakness in the rotation movement of the head and loss of gag reflex recovered totally, while deviation in the uvula was permanent. Cholesteatomas can extend to posterior fossa and cause jugular foramen syndrome. Early surgery is important to completely reverse the lost nerve functions in treatment.
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PMID:Jugular foramen syndrome caused by choleastatoma. 1588 97


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