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1.
Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery ; : 31-35, 2016.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-632649

ABSTRACT

@#<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>OBJECTIVE:</strong> To present an unusual cause of pulsatile tinnitus, presenting in a young adult suffering from chronic recurrent foul-smelling discharge from the same ear.<br /><strong>METHODS:</strong><br /><strong>Design:</strong> Case Report<br /><strong>Setting:</strong> Tertiary National University Hospital<br /><strong>Patient:</strong> One<br /><strong>RESULTS:</strong> A 24 year-old woman presented with pulsatile tinnitus on a background of chronic recurrent foul-smelling discharge. Clinico-radiologic findings seemed consistent with a glomus tympanicum coexisting with chronic suppurative otitis media with cholesteatoma. She underwent tympanomastoidectomy with excision of the mass. Histopathologic evaluation revealed the mass to be granulation tissue.<br /><strong>CONCLUSION:</strong> Pulsatile tinnitus is rarely associated with chronic middle ear infection. Granulation tissue arising at the promontory may mimic glomus tumors when accompanied with this symptom. Despite this revelation, it would still be prudent to prepare for a possible glomus tumor intraoperatively so that profuse bleeding and complications may be avoided.</p>


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Young Adult , Earache , Headache , Vertigo , Glomus Tumor , Cholesteatoma
2.
Acta Medica Philippina ; : 0-2.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-959633

ABSTRACT

Core needle biopsy (CNB) has been used increasingly as a diagnostic tool in evaluating mammary lesions. To determine the test characteristics of CNB, histopathologic review of palpable breast masses in 81 female patients (mean age: 48 years, range 17-71 years) obtained by non-imaging-guided CNB at the Philippine General Hospital Out-Patient Department from January 1999 to March 2001 was compared with the reviewed results of the subsequent excision (excision biopsy, simple mastectomy and modified radical mastectomy) as the reference standard. Of the 81 cases, 62 (77 percent) were histologically confirmed as malignant and 19 (23 percent) were benign. Of the 81 CNBs, 22 (27 percent) were unsatisfactory biopsies. Evaluation of CNB test characteristics was based on the rest of the 59 "satisfactory" CNBs. Test characteristics were: Sensitivity=82.2 percent, Specificity=92.2 percent, Accuracy=84.7 percent, Positive Predictive Value=97.4 percent, Negative Predictive Value=61.9 percent. The test characteristics were lower compared to previously reported values which were however largely based on image-guided CNBs. Specimen adequacy, operator differences in skills and expertise, and histopathologic interpretation error may account for the difference. (Author)

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