Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0262471 (
ENT
)
5,307
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Vertigo in children is rarer than in adults and the examiner in cases showing these symptoms must rely on the parents' or relatives' observations and details. Besides the equilibrium disorders caused by hereditary malabsorption or lesions in the peripheral or central vestibular structures, e.g. ototoxic drugs, tumours in the brain, meningitis, encephalitis, otitis, labyrinthine fistulas or head trauma, we only known of typical diseases, associated with vertigo, that develop during childhood. These are: so-called benign paroxysmal vertigo of childhood, benign paroxysmal
torticollis
, basilar migraine, spasmus nutans, visual-cliff phenomenon, and kinetosis. Careful examinations are necessary to differentiate these illnesses from vestibular epilepsy, brain tumours, and hereditary episodic vertigo. Neuro-otologic examination in children, especially small children, is a kind of "stepchild" in
ENT
departments. The reasons are the time-consuming examination necessary in the case of children and by problems connected with a plethora of troublesome individual tests. Additional difficulties arise in cases of sensory, mental, and other impairments. - The paper gives an overview of vestibular disturbances during childhood and diagnostic procedures for determination by means of Frenzel glasses, electronystagmography, cranio-corpography, and posturography.
...
PMID:[Equilibrium disorders and their diagnosis in childhood]. 174 79
We report a new case of spondylodiscitis due to Kingella kingae in a 19-month-old infant who had
torticollis
as the first manifestation. The main characteristics of Kingella kingae infections are reviewed: frequency of
ENT
and joint localizations, slow course, difficult clinical and bacteriological diagnosis, and satisfactory susceptibility to antimicrobial agents.
...
PMID:[Cervical spondylodiscitis caused by Kingella kingae. Apropos of a case]. 235 Jan 42
Febrile acute
torticollis
in the child represents a special clinical picture. Of variable cause, it may be indicative of an inflammatory, infectious or dystrophic pathology affecting any of the anatomical structures of the neck. Treatment is quite clearly defined, and it may be a therapeutic emergency. All
ENT
specialists must be familiar with this since they are most likely to be the first physician to whom such a child is brought.
...
PMID:[Febrile acute torticollis (author's transl)]. 724 11
Dystonia as cause of pharyngo-laryngeal motility disorders has not been adequately considered in most clinical
ENT
practices. This case study of a patient with spasmodic
torticollis
, Meige's syndrome and pharyngo-laryngeal motility disorder was found to be due to dystonia as the underlying cause. The possibility of local symptomatic therapy with botulinum toxin injections has currently provided the physician with an effective means for alleviating the disorder.
...
PMID:[Dystonia as the cause of pharyngolaryngeal motility disorders]. 755 8
Sandifer syndrome, named after the neurologist Paul Sandifer, was first reported by M. Kinsbourne in 1962 who noticed a disorder of the upper gastrointestinal tract with neurological manifestations occurring in children and adolescents. Sandifer syndrome is a combination of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease with spastic
torticollis
and dystonic body movements with or without hiatal hernia. It is hypothesised that the positioning of the head provides relief from abdominal discomfort caused by acid reflux. The true pathophysiological mechanisms of the condition are still unclear. We report the diagnosis of Sandifer syndrome in a 9-year-old boy with a history of chronic
torticollis
and dystonic episodes for 5 years associated with abdominal symptoms. The cause of the dystonic body movements had not been found, although multiple neuropsychiatric diseases were suspected. The patient had been seen by many different specialities including Paediatrics, Paediatric Neurology, Psychology, Orthopaedic Surgery and
ENT
but the reason for the
torticollis
remained elusive. Unclear abdominal discomfort was the indication for an endoscopy that revealed severe gastro-oesophageal reflux disease with oesophagitis III degrees and a hiatal hernia which led to the correct diagnosis of Sandifer syndrome. After medical treatment and laparoscopic floppy Nissen fundoplication the symptoms nearly resolved 3 months after operation. Few reports of this syndrome exist, but Sandifer syndrome is probably underrecognised. Children with
torticollis
, dystonic episodes or atypical seizures should be evaluated for GERD and Sandifer syndrome. Early surgery, for example a laparoscopic floppy Nissen fundoplication or a Toupet procedure, can resolve the symptoms.
...
PMID:Sandifer syndrome--a multidisciplinary diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. 1763 61
Congenital neck masses in children and their embryologic and clinical features. Neck masses of congenital origin can be diagnostic and therapeutic challenges for internists, paediatricians and surgeons. Treatment modalities of congenital neck masses are different depending on their nature, symptoms and location. Differential diagnosis includes a variety of diseases that can cause cervical masses such as infectious and neoplastic neck tumours. Our objective is to review the embryologic and clinical features of some of the most common congenital neck masses such as the haemangioma, branchial cleft anomalies, thyroglossal duct cyst, ectopic thyroid, congenital midline cervical cleft, congenital cervical teratoma, lymphangioma, cervical thymic cyst, dermoid cyst and congenital muscular
torticollis
.
B-
ENT
2008
PMID:Congenital neck masses in children and their embryologic and clinical features. 1850 16
Ocular abnormal head posture (AHP) or
torticollis
is a frequent sign in pediatric pathology The incidence is 5.6% in ophthalmological practice and 3.19% in pediatric ophthalmological practice. The abnormal head posture is adopted to improve visual acuity maintain binocular single vision, center residual visual field with the body or for cosmetic reasons. Face turn is the most frequent abnormal head posture in pediatric ophthalmology. The more common diseases causing face turn are Duane syndrome, congenital fibrosis of extraocular muscles, nystagmus, refractive errors, visual field defects. The most frequent ocular causes of head tilt in children are congenital nystagmus, superior oblique paresis, dissociated vertical deviation, Brown syndrome, refractive errors. Chin-up or chin-down abnormal head postures are most commonly caused by "A" and "V"-pattern strabismus, palpebral ptosis, nystagmus, refractive errors.
Torticollis
is not a diagnosis, but it is a sign of an underlying disease. There are ocular diseases which diagnosis is straightforward for general practitioner, pediatricians or pediatric surgeons (horizontal nystagmus, lateral rectus paralysis, ptosis, esotropia), but others less obvious (superior oblique paralysis, Duane syndrome, A and V-pattern strabismus, torsional nystagmus) because of the compensatory head posture, and these last disorders are predisposed to confusion with congenital AHP Interdisciplinary collaboration between ophthalmologist, pediatrician, pediatric surgeon,
ENT
specialist and neurologist is mandatory in establishing the etiology of AHP Every child with AHP must be examined by an ophthalmologist.
...
PMID:Understanding ocular torticollis in children. 2177 81
Retropharyngeal abscesses are rare in adults. They occur mostly in immunocompromised patients or as a foreign body complication. We report 5 cases of retropharyngeal abscess collected in the
ENT
Department of CHU Mohammed VI of Marrakech, during a two-year period (December 2008 to December 2009). Local trauma by foreign body ingestion was the aetiology in four patients. The presenting symptoms, for all patients, were fever, odynophagia,
torticollis
, and trismus, and the clinical examination showed bulging of the posterior wall of the oropharynx. The radiography of cervical spine showed prevertebral thickening in all cases, this thickening was associated with an aspect of vertebral lysis of the fourth cervical vertebra in one case. A CT scan was performed in all our cases and showed features of retropharyngeal abscess which was associated, in one case, with spondylodiscitis. The biological assessment found one case of diabetes. The intradermal reaction to the tuberculin was clearly positive in one case. Endobuccal abscess puncture was practiced in 4 cases; only one organism was identified by culture: Staphylococcus aureus treatment was based on triple intravenous antibiotics and anti-Koch's therapy (in one case), and the surgical drainage under general anesthesia was also performed in the case of the diabetes patient which required also the correction of hyperglycemia in intensive care unit. The outcome was good in all our patients. The diagnosis of retropharyngeal abscess can be difficult and one must seek a comorbidity; a tuberculosis aetiology must be considered in countries with a high prevalence. The management of these cases is based on antibiotics and surgical drainage.
...
PMID:Retropharyngeal abscess in adults: five case reports and review of the literature. 2212 22
Grisel's syndrome is a rare complication of
ENT
area infections. It consists of a non-traumatic atlantoaxial subluxation after an infectious process. Its characteristic symptom is persistent
torticollis
despite a resolved infection. The knowledge of this condition helps early diagnosis and treatment. We therefore present the case of a patient with Grisel's syndrome as a sequela of an acute mastoiditis complicated by a Bezold's abscess.
...
PMID:Grisel's syndrome as a sequela of a complicated acute mastoiditis. 2226 11
We present a case report of a four-year-old boy with torcicollis and trismus after acute otitis media. Grisel Syndrome diagnosis in association with temporo-mandibular reactive arthritis was admitted, leading to early conservative treatment. GS should be suspected in a child presenting with
torticollis
after an upper respiratory tract infection or an
ENT
surgical procedure. The association with temporo-mandibular reactive findings is somehow rarer but not impossible, due to the close vascular communication between retropharyngeal and pterigoid spaces.
...
PMID:Grisel syndrome, acute otitis media, and temporo-mandibular reactive arthritis: A rare association. 2606 Jan 48
1
2
Next >>