ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVES: To develop a method to quantify nasal tissue resilience, to establish the normal range for persons without nasal obstruction, and to measure the changes in tissue resilience resulting from standard open rhinoplastic techniques. METHODS: A new device is described that determines nasal tissue resilience. Measurements on the nasal tip were obtained in triplicate at 5 distinct anatomical sites. Normal values (N = 60) were stratified for both sexes into 3 different age groups. Preoperative and postoperative measurements were also obtained in 6 patients who underwent open rhinoplasty for airway obstruction. One patient who underwent intranasal valve repair was included for comparison. All operative patients underwent preoperative and postoperative rhinomanometric measurements. RESULTS: Across all age and sex groups the anterior septal angle is the firmest area of the nasal tip. The mean tissue resilience over the interdomal area and the midcolumella is significantly greater in men than in women. The resilience of the interdomal area exhibits an age effect, with decreasing stiffness over time. The postoperative changes seen correlate well with the placement of structural grafts during rhinoplasty. CONCLUSIONS: Nasal tip support can be quantified. Normative values have been established, which allow one to identify areas of inadequate tip support in persons with nasal obstruction. Alterations in tip support resulting from surgical intervention can be quantified. Open rhinoplasty techniques are an excellent tool to restore deficiencies in nasal tip support.
Subject(s)
Nose/physiology , Rhinoplasty/methods , Adult , Aged , Biomechanical Phenomena , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Nose/anatomy & histology , Nose/surgery , Reference ValuesABSTRACT
The intraoperative management of a patent jugular bulb presents a formidable challenge during the treatment of lateral skull base lesions. Whether to preserve, partially occlude, or completely sacrifice this critical structure is a decision best made following a multifactorial analysis of preoperative clinicoradiographic data, tumor histopathology, and intraoperative findings. Twenty-six patients with tumors requiring dissection near a patent jugular bulb were reviewed. Ten patients had superior neck tumors, nine had primary temporal bone lesions, and seven presented with recurrent parotid malignancies. The most common clinical manifestations were headache and vocal cord paralysis and the most significant radiographic finding was the presence of a mass at the styloid base. Jugular bulb patency was preserved in six patients, partially maintained in seven, and was sacrificed in 13 individuals. This article focuses on the clinicoradiographic findings in patients with neoplastic jugular foramen encroachment, but preserved jugular blood flow. Surgical technique will be detailed through selected case presentations and the management of lower cranial nerve injuries will be reviewed.
ABSTRACT
The effect of continuous infusion of lidocaine on acute spinal cord trauma in cats was studied. Intravenous and subarachnoid administration of lidocaine did not alter generation and conduction of the spinal evoked responses (SERs) in intact animals. The cortical somatosensory evoked responses and SERs were abolished after weight drop injuries of 120 and 400 g-cm. No return of the evoked responses occurred within 4 hours after trauma in either the lidocaine- or the saline-treated groups. Loss of SERs and appearance of an evoked injury potential were sensitive determinants of spinal cord injury. We concluded that lidocaine treatment did not facilitate the return of spinal cord function in this model of acute spinal cord injury.