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1.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-159348

ABSTRACT

Congenital absence of the nose (arhinia) is extremely rare. Arhinia leads to severe airway impairment and poor feeding in the neonate. Th e degree of nasal absence varies from case to case. Here, we present a case of congenital complete arhinia associated with other craniofacial anomalies. Arhinia leads to severe respiratory distress and feeding problems in newborn warranting emergency management, but our case diff ers as the child was adapted to mouth breathing and naso-gastric tube feeding, giving us the opportunity to delay the defi nitive management for a few weeks yet avoiding the risk of operating in a small child to create nasal airway or tracheostomy on an emergency basis.


Subject(s)
Choanal Atresia/diagnosis , Choanal Atresia/therapy , Congenital Abnormalities/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Microphthalmos/diagnosis , Microphthalmos/therapy , Nose/abnormalities , Premature Birth
2.
The Medical Journal of Malaysia ; : 368-71, 2013.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-630358

ABSTRACT

Chronic discharging ear, mostly due to middle or external ear infection, is one of the leading causes for seeking healthcare among the paediatric population in a developing country. However, a long-standing forgotten middle ear foreign body forms a rare cause for such presentation demanding a high index of suspicion from the clinicians. Most of them are iatrogenic or accidental, and are removed by conventional permeatal approach; need for tympanotomy is rarely documented in the recent literature. We report the first case where a large stone was introduced into the middle ear through a pre-existing tympanic membrane perforation by the child himself, and only the second documentation of removal of a middle ear foreign body by tympanotomy in a child.

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