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1.
Laryngorhinootologie ; 102(2): 132-145, 2023 02.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36750113

ABSTRACT

Tinnitus is a highly prevalent symptom and a common reason for seeing an otolaryngologist. Since tinnitus can go hand in hand with hearing loss, the step-by-step clarification of hearing loss is one of the essential ENT examinations for tinnitus sufferers. The anamnesis and medical history are relevant, since a multidimensional interaction with the tinnitus can be important for the treatment, especially in the case of a psychological comorbidity. In the vast majority of patients, no causal factor can be found. In the absence of external stimuli, phantom perceptions of tones or noises are held responsible for subjective tinnitus, which probably arises from pathological changes of the auditory pathway, but also in non-auditory cortical structures. In the case of acute tinnitus, a comprehensive audiological assessment is needed, and if the hearing threshold is normal, counseling is the priority. The patient must be informed about the nature of these benign symptoms. So far, there is no acute therapy that has been proven to increase the probability of healing, i.e. the disappearance of the acute tinnitus. Only if the hearing threshold descended, for instance in case of sudden idiopathic hearing loss, therapy of the underlying disease can also lead to improvement or healing of the acute tinnitus. Counseling for chronic tinnitus with high burden is also about reducing exaggerated expectations of healing that cannot be fulfilled. The training of habituation strategies is important. The standard of therapy for chronic tinnitus with psychological strain represents cognitive behavioral therapy for dealing with the tinnitus in a beneficial way. Tinnitus is a symptom of a very heterogeneous group of patients. In the future, it is to be hoped that digital applications and interventions in particular will be evaluated in quality-controlled clinical studies in order to be able to further personalize patient therapy.


Subject(s)
Hearing Loss, Sudden , Tinnitus , Humans , Tinnitus/diagnosis , Hearing , Hearing Loss, Sudden/therapy , Acoustic Stimulation/methods , Auditory Pathways
2.
Front Neurol ; 13: 1019554, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36438936

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Post-paralytic facial synkinesis after facial nerve injury produces functional disabilities and mimetic deficits, but also cosmetic and non-motor psychosocial impairments for the patients. These patients typically have a high and continuous high motivation for rehabilitation. The aim is to inform the affected patients and their therapeutic professionals (otorhinolaryngologist - head and neck surgeons; oral-maxillofacial surgeons, plastic and reconstructive surgeons, neurosurgeons, neurologists, and mime therapists be it speech and language therapy- or physiotherapy-based) and to provide practical recommendations for diagnostics and a stepwise systematic treatment approach of facial synkinesis. Methods: In the first phase, a systematic literature search on the topic in PubMed and ScienceDirect starting in 2008 resulted in 132 articles. These were the basis for the review and a comprehensive series of consensus statements on the most important diagnostic tests and treatment options. In the second phase, one consensus article circulated among the membership of the International Head and Neck Scientific Group until a final agreement was reached for all recommendations. Results: Diagnostics should include a standardized assessment of the degree of synkinesis using validated clinician-graded instruments and synkinesis-specific patient-reported outcome measures. Treatments for facial synkinesis include facial training mainly based on facial biofeedback retraining, chemodenervation with botulinum toxin, selective neurectomy, myectomy, and any combination treatment of these options. Conclusion: A basic understanding of the pathomechanisms of synkinesis is essential to understand the treatment strategies. A standardized assessment of the synkinetic symptoms and the individual synkinesis pattern is needed. The first-line treatment is facial training, followed by botulinum toxin. Surgery is reserved for individual cases with unsatisfactory first-line treatment.

3.
Cancers (Basel) ; 15(1)2022 Dec 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36612208

ABSTRACT

The intraoperative assessment of tumor margins of head and neck cancer is crucial for complete tumor resection and patient outcome. The current standard is to take tumor biopsies during surgery for frozen section analysis by a pathologist after H&E staining. This evaluation is time-consuming, subjective, methodologically limited and underlies a selection bias. Optical methods such as hyperspectral imaging (HSI) are therefore of high interest to overcome these limitations. We aimed to analyze the feasibility and accuracy of an intraoperative HSI assessment on unstained tissue sections taken from seven patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma. Afterwards, the tissue sections were subjected to standard histopathological processing and evaluation. We trained different machine learning models on the HSI data, including a supervised 3D convolutional neural network to perform tumor detection. The results were congruent with the histopathological annotations. Therefore, this approach enables the delineation of tumor margins with artificial HSI-based histopathological information during surgery with high speed and accuracy on par with traditional intraoperative tumor margin assessment (Accuracy: 0.76, Specificity: 0.89, Sensitivity: 0.48). With this, we introduce HSI in combination with ML hyperspectral imaging as a potential new tool for intraoperative tumor margin assessment.

4.
Sci Adv ; 6(49)2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33277250

ABSTRACT

The biophysical and biochemical properties of live tissues are important in the context of development and disease. Methods for evaluating these properties typically involve destroying the tissue or require specialized technology and complicated analyses. Here, we present a novel, noninvasive methodology for determining the spatial distribution of tissue features within embryos, making use of nondirectionally migrating cells and software we termed "Landscape," which performs automatized high-throughput three-dimensional image registration. Using the live migrating cells as bioprobes, we identified structures within the zebrafish embryo that affect the distribution of the cells and studied one such structure constituting a physical barrier, which, in turn, influences amoeboid cell polarity. Overall, this work provides a unique approach for detecting tissue properties without interfering with animal's development. In addition, Landscape allows for integrating data from multiple samples, providing detailed and reliable quantitative evaluation of variable biological phenotypes in different organisms.


Subject(s)
Cell Polarity , Zebrafish , Animals , Zebrafish/genetics
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