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Query: UMLS:C0242429 (
sore throat
)
2,760
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 71-year-old woman was transferred to Kushiro City General Hospital because of fever,
sore throat
, diffuse neck swelling and dyspnea. She had received right mastectomy for breast cancer under general anesthesia 6 days before the admission. The lateral X-ray film of the neck revealed abscess in the retropharyngeal space and the retroesophageal space. CT scan revealed mediastinitis. Next day she received neck dissection for drainage of the abscess under general anesthesia. Although the posterior pharyngeal wall was swollen, endo-tracheal intubation was not difficult. Brown tinged and purplish pus was aspirated from the interspace of carotid sheath and trachea, the retropharyngeal space, and the superior mediastinal space. The infected site was irrigated with a lot of peroxide and saline and draining tubes were placed in each interspace. Tracheostomy was not done but the patient was admitted to the ICU with her trachea intubated. The day after operation, she was extubated. Three days after the operation chest X-ray revealed pyothorax and chest tube was inserted for drainage. Seven days after the operation she was transferred to the
ENT
ward. Thereafter her recovery course was uneventful. It seems that the deep neck infection was probably caused by the injury on endotracheal intubation at the first operation in this case. Although this patient was cured of mediastinitis following deep neck infection, which is still lethal, early diagnosis and surgical drainage of the abscess are necessary.
...
PMID:[Deep neck infection following endotracheal intubation]. 147 68
From 1987 to 1989, 14 adults with acute epiglottitis were seen and treated at the
ENT
clinic of Geneva. All patients presented with a severe
sore throat
as primary symptom. An indirect laryngoscopy, which bears no risk in adults, was performed and revealed a swollen, cherry-red epiglottis. The course of the disease is unpredictable, and rapid development of airway obstruction may occur. In most cases, these patients can be treated medically with antibiotics and corticoids, and there is no need for systematic orotracheal intubation. However, patients presenting with respiratory distress syndrome or stridor require intubation, which may be impossible because of edema of the epiglottis. Therefore, a surgeon must be ready to perform a tracheotomy.
...
PMID:[Epiglottitis in adults]. 239 55
The AA. suggest the diagnosis of peptic Pharyngitis for those patients with normal
ENT
exploration but enduring
sore throat
associated to acidopeptic disorders.
...
PMID:[Peptic pharyngitis]. 267 62
Two patients with sudden progressive profound hearing loss resulting from Ramsay Hunt syndrome are reported. Case 1: A 63-year-old woman was admitted to Jichi Medical School Hospital with sudden, progressing deafness of the left ear, vertigo,
sore throat
, and hoarseness. An otoscopic examination revealed the external ear and the tympanic membrane to be normal. Pure-tone audiometry revealed profound deafness in the left ear. A horizontal nystagmus in the non-affected direction was observed by gaze nystagmus test. An endoscopic examination revealed herpetic vesicles and shallow ulcers on the left side of the pharynx and the larynx. There was complete paralysis of the left recurrent nerve. Hearing acuity of the left ear did not recover at all with steroid hormone therapy. Case 2: A 75-year-old man was referred to the
ENT
Clinic by a dermatologist for hearing evaluation in Ramsay Hunt syndrome. The man had noticed severe otalgia and sudden progressive deafness of the right ear approximately 2 weeks prior to admission. Physical examination revealed herpetic vesicles and ulcers in the right external ear and lateral neck. Complete paralysis of the right facial nerve was noted. Profound hearing loss in the affected ear was observed by pure-tone audiometry. A gaze nystagmus test revealed a horizontal nystagmus in the non-affected direction. No recovery of the cochlear function was noted following administration of antiviral drug. The pertinent literature is briefly reviewed.
...
PMID:Acute profound deafness in Ramsay Hunt syndrome. Two case reports. 285 31
Acute epiglottitis in adults is a potentially fatal but self-limiting disease of increasing incidence world-wide. Forty-two patients, seen consecutively over a four year period at the
ENT
Department, Singapore General Hospital were reviewed retrospectively. A strong male predominance with a peak age incidence in the sixth decade was noted. A severe
sore throat
and dysphagia with disproportionate signs of oropharyngeal inflammation was the main presenting picture. Only three patients had stridor on presentation. Vigilant monitoring of the airway with empirical high-dose intravenous ampicillin, cloxacillin and steroids resulted in a dramatic clinical improvement in most patients and none developed stridor after admission. The yield from throat swabs and blood cultures were low. Two patients developed complications, a Ludwigs angina and an epiglottic abscess. Recurrent epiglottitis was a problem in one patient. There was low morbidity and no mortality on the management regime outlined.
...
PMID:Acute epiglottitis in adults (the Singapore experience). 320 35
This study investigated plasma concentration profiles, pharmacokinetic characteristics and side-effects of lidocaine following 3 different administration techniques. Sixty ASA I/II patients undergoing elective
ENT
-operations were randomised into 4 groups. Lidocaine 1% (1 mg/kg) was administered 50 min before the end of the operation, via a regular endotracheal tube (group 1), a suction-catheter deep endobronchially (group 2), or an EDGAR-(Endobronchial-Drug and Gas Application during Resuscitation)-tube characterized by a separate injection channel ending at the orifice of the tube (group 3). For the control group, a regular endotracheal tube was inserted without lidocaine administration (group 4). Anesthesia was induced with propofol (2 mg/kg), sufentanil (0.5 micrograms/kg), and vecuronium (0.08 mg/kg) and continued as total intravenous anesthesia with propofol (8 mg/kg/h) and oxygen in air (FiO2 = 0.33). A control and 13 blood samples were taken up to 180 min after lidocaine administration. Lidocaine plasma concentrations were determined using a fluorescence polarization immunoassay (TDxFLx). Heart rate, blood pressure, endtidal PcO2, and oxygen saturation were similar in all groups investigated. Ventilation was interrupted for 3.6 +/- 0.5 s in group 1 and 10.2 +/- 0.8 s in group 2, to administer lidocaine. Patients from group 3 were ventilated continuously because of a separate injection channel integrated in the EDGAR-tube.
Sore throat
was significantly increased in group 2 as compared with groups 1, 3 and 4. Asorption of lidocaine in groups 1-3 resulted in maximal mean plasma concentrations ranging from 0.78 to 0.85 micrograms/ml after 16.9 to 22.4 min.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The technique of endobronchial lidocaine administration does not influence plasma concentration profiles and pharmacokinetic parameters in humans. 778 24
A previously healthy 39-yr-old man was scheduled for exploratory laparotomy due to acute abdomen. There was no sign of difficult intubation. After induction of anesthesia with thiopental and succinylcholine, the trachea was easily intubated with a 7.0 mm cuffed endotracheal tube. Surgery for a ruptured appendix with 2 drainage tubes lasted for 75 min was uneventful. At the end of surgery, the endotracheal tube was removed without difficulty. On the 1st postoperative day, the patient developed stridor. The symptom persisted even after conservative treatment and removal of NG tube. On the 12th postoperative day, a telescopic videolarygoscopy revealed immobile right vocal cord with anterior and medial displacement to the right. Arytenoid cartilage was moderately edematous. A diagnosis of right arytenoid subluxation was then made. On the 17th postoperative day, a closed reduction of right arytenoid cartilage using direct laryngoscope was performed successively under general anesthesia. Eight weeks after the reduction, his voice and laryngoscopic findings were normal. There has been only 18 reports with 27 cases of this complication found in the literature. However, it is generally believed that it is not so unusual. The post-intubation syndromes, such as
sore throat
, dysphonia, odynophagia, difficulty in swallowing or breathing which persists beyond 5 days warrant
ENT
consultation. Abnormal mobility of vocal cord, edema over arytenoid area found by indirect laryngoscopy should suggest the complication. Further confirmation is then needed. Although the result of our case is good, the reduction should ideally be done within 24-48 h after the incidence to avoid unfavorable long-term sequelae.
...
PMID:[Arytenoid subluxation following endotracheal intubation--a case report]. 778 99
Fifty-one patients who presented with anterior cervical or
throat pain
, without apparent cause, were selected for study at the
ENT
outpatient department from January 1987 to January 1992. Their clinical symptoms, probable aetiologies and treatment were studied. The most common diagnosis was hyoid syndrome, followed by thyroid cartilage syndrome and cricoid cartilage syndrome. These last two syndromes have not been previously reported because they were coined in Ramathibodi Hospital for patients who had similar clinical patterns localized to the thyroid and cricoid cartilages respectively. Treatment using intralesional triamcinolone acetonide injection was effective in all cases. There was no recurrence after one-five years follow-up.
...
PMID:Anterior cervical pain syndromes: hyoid, thyroid and cricoid cartilage syndromes and their treatment with triamcinolone acetonide. 787 37
An experimental and clinical study of an endotracheal tube with a foam-filled cuff has been carried out. The experimental study showed that, during inspiration, the cuff was insufflated through the "T piece" connecting the cuff in the inspiratory limb of the ventilator circuit, preventing inspiratory leak. The intracuff pressure was equal to airway pressure. During expiration the gas insufflated into cuff leaked out through the "T piece" and intracuff pressure rapidly returned to zero. When N2O in 50% O2 was used for one hour, intracuff pressure did not increase. Twenty patients intubated with a foam-filled cuff tube, for
ENT
surgery, have been studied. The mean intubating time was 151 min +/- 36 and two patients were intubed, respectively, 26 hours and 28 hours. No complications were noted, 24 hours after extubation, during laryngeal fibroscopic control. Only two patients had light edema of the vocal cords and three of them had a light inflammation of the subglottic mucosa, without
sore throat
. No tracheal ischaemic damage nor tracheal mucosal inflammation were observed.
...
PMID:[An experimental and clinical study of a new intubation tube with a foam-filled cuff]. 863 60
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.
...
PMID:[A prospective study of ENT complication following surgery of the cervical spine by the anterior approach (preliminary results)]. 977 50
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