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1.
Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital ; 16(6): 526-31, 1996 Dec.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9381923

ABSTRACT

Surgical techniques of sub-total reconstructive laryngectomies can often prevent the serious impairment of total laryngectomy without having to relinquish oncological radicality. The aim of the present work has been to report on the experience in this field accrued in the ENT Department of the University of Modena from 1987 to 1992. During this period 54 subtotal laryngectomies were performed. Of these, 13 were crico-hyoido-epiglotto-pexies (C.H.E.P.) and the remaining 41 were crico-hyoido-pexies (C.H.P.). The criteria suggested in the literature was adopted for tumor evaluation, surgical indications and contraindications. All the patients had a follow-up of at least 2 years and 31 of them have had at least 5 years of follow-up. There were 9 deaths: 3 due to intervening illnesses, 2 from second primary tumors and 4 from tumor and/or node recurrences. The overall survival was 83.3% at 2 years and 77.6% at 5 years. Determinate survival (ruling out those who had died because of intervening illnesses) were 88.2% and 80%, respectively. There were 11 neoplastic repetitions of which 2 were of the primary tumor, 2 of the primary tumor plus cervical metastases, and 7 of cervical metastases alone. Recovery surgery was performed in 9 patients, 5 of whom are still alive and disease free. Functional recovery (respiration, deglutition) took place slightly earlier in C.H.E.P. than in C.H.P. but in both cases this could be shortened, particularly by introducing a rehabilitative protocol during the immediate post-operative period. In no case did it prove necessary to perform a total laryngectomy to avoid "ab ingestis" problems and only one patient has a permanent tracheostomy.


Subject(s)
Laryngeal Neoplasms/surgery , Laryngectomy , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Laryngeal Neoplasms/mortality , Laryngeal Neoplasms/pathology , Retrospective Studies , Survival Rate
2.
Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital ; 15(5): 375-82, 1995 Oct.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8721728

ABSTRACT

Posterior laryngeal granuloma is an infrequent pathology of multidisciplinary interest. Actually, its real prevalence is difficult to quantify because in some cases it is asymptomatic and in other instances it may either be reabsorbed or eliminated spontaneously. It is located at the vocal apophysis of the arytenoid or, less frequently, above it or on the laryngeal side of the arytenoid. The many etiologic factors (laryngeal intubation, gastro-esophageal refluxes, blunt trauma of the larynx, vocal dysfunction), sometimes concomitant and with the possible addition of enhancing circumstances (upper aerodigestive tract inflammation, naso-gastric tube, smoking and alcohol abuse), converge to a single pathogenetic mechanism: an ulceration of the mucosa and the pericondrium, sometimes complicated by an infection, which does not heal but instead produces a typical granulation tissue with capillaries oriented radially from the center of the lesion. Post intubation granulomas, extremely rare in children, are more frequent in females. It appears that there is no correlation with duration of intubation in that granulomas, can also occur after short general anesthesia. Idiopathic or contact granulomas are more frequent in the males. They are the result of vocal laryngeal hyperfunction, habitual throat clearing or cough-like throat clearing. Gastro-esophageal reflux of gastric juice, coughing or throat clearing may injure the mucosa. A blunt trauma of the larynx may cause a granuloma if the cartilage of the vocal process is exposed. Symptoms, when present, are dysphonia, tiredness during or after voicing, bolus, laryngeal unilateral pain, sensation of something in the throat which is mobile during breathing and swallowing, traces of blood in the expectoration. Therapeutic options are surgical, medical or logopedic. Surgery, although followed by frequent recurrences, is mandatory when the granuloma causes dispnea or if a pathologic essay is needed. Medical treatment aims at solving gastroesophageal reflux and/or inflammations of the district. Logopedic rehabilitation is the most successful therapy. Since January 1992 the Authors have been adopting the rehabilitation protocol planned by the French phoniatrician Brigitte Arnoux-Sindt for post-intubation granulomas, which, moreover, is utilyzed for all type of granulomas, including those arising during the early postoperative period after cordectomy. This protocol is analytically presented and discussed. In the cases of contact granulomas, and when there is concomitant vocal dysfunction, logopedic treatment is prolonged after granuloma dissapearance with some sessions aiming at restoring correct vocal behaviour. In all the ten patients rehabilitated up to now, granulomas disappeared after a mean of 16.3 sessions held twice a week. After several months of follow-up we had no recurrences. This clinical experience, while limited in number, seems to confirm the good results already reported in French Literature.


Subject(s)
Granuloma/complications , Granuloma/physiopathology , Larynx/physiopathology , Voice Disorders/etiology , Voice Disorders/rehabilitation , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Female , Granuloma/etiology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Speech Therapy
3.
J Radiol ; 74(1): 1-12, 1993 Jan.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8483144

ABSTRACT

The larynges of 8 healthy and informed volunteers were studied with a superconductive MR unit at 1.5 T together with those of 10 patients with extra-laryngeal pathologic conditions. The study was performed with round surface coils (5'') and with delicated sellar coils in the anterior neck. Slices were 5 mm thick, and acquired on the coronal, axial, and sagittal planes, with T1-weighting; axial scans were repeated in the same locations with double echoes, with proton-density and T2-weighting. Five patients underwent additional scans after Gd-DTPA. The larynx of a semi-frozen cadaver was examined with sellar surface coils, on similar scanning planes and with similar pulse sequences to those described above; the larynx was removed, investigated with mammographic technique, and subsequently analyzed with thin CT slices and a high-resolution reconstruction algorithm for the study of laryngeal cartilage. Axial anatomical sections were then compared with MR and CT scans, and the anatomical structures were recognized on the triplanar MR scans of a volunteer's larynx. Besides MR anatomy of supporting laryngeal structures, the authors describe in detail the muscles, plicae, spaces and cavities which can be identified on the various planes, together with the changes in signal after Gd-DTPA.


Subject(s)
Larynx/anatomy & histology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Adult , Arytenoid Cartilage/anatomy & histology , Cricoid Cartilage/anatomy & histology , Epiglottis/anatomy & histology , Female , Glottis/anatomy & histology , Humans , Laryngeal Cartilages/anatomy & histology , Laryngeal Mucosa/anatomy & histology , Laryngeal Muscles/anatomy & histology , Larynx/diagnostic imaging , Ligaments , Male , Middle Aged , Thyroid Cartilage/anatomy & histology , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Vocal Cords/anatomy & histology
4.
Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital ; 12(3): 273-83, 1992.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1298152

ABSTRACT

Functional laryngectomies permit a more or less ideal preservation of laryngeal functions whose recovery, especially in les conservative operations, occurs very slowly and depends on several conditions: post operative course, sensitivity and motility of the hypopharynx, patient's ability to restore swallowing mechanisms. The Authors relate their experience concerning use of a rehabilitative program partially based on the experiences of some French logopedic schools and partially original. They illustrate the steps and goals of this program which starts on the fifth post-operative day with respiration exercises immediately followed by eight days of exercises to re-establish arytenoid mobilization and swallowing movements. If deglutition is not completely recovered and important inhalation problems persist, the logopedic approach is integrated with surgical rehabilitation consisting of one or more injection of gax-collagen. It is possible to use the same surgical technique later, after hospital discharge, if a slight dysphagia is still present in spite of continuous logopedic rehabilitation. Voice restoration exercises are introduced in the last days of the hospital stay when the patient is tube-free and continues at the office or outpatient clinic for two or three times every week. Concerning removal priority (tracheotomy tube followed by nasogastric tube or vice versa), we propose a diversified strategy for each patient, depending on the anatomicofunctional postoperative situation. Up to now 25 patients have taken part in this rehabilitation program (14 cricohyoidopexy, 6 Cricohyoidoepiglottopexy, 5 supraglottic laryngectomies). The results with regard to the amount of time that nasogastric feeding as well as tracheal tube are kept and the length of the hospital stay, were compared to those ones of a similar number of consecutive cases operated at our institution (ENT Department of Modena University) before February 1990 but not rehabilitated. In the early rehabilitated group, we observe a quicker functional recovery with a shorter hospital stay (about a week).


Subject(s)
Laryngectomy/rehabilitation , Breathing Exercises , Combined Modality Therapy , Deglutition/physiology , Humans , Laryngectomy/methods , Postoperative Care , Speech Therapy , Time Factors , Voice
5.
Radiol Med ; 82(3): 218-29, 1991 Sep.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1947254

ABSTRACT

The larynges of 8 healthy and informed volunteers were studied with a superconductive MR unit at 1.5 T together with those of 10 patients with extralaryngeal pathologic conditions. The study was performed with round surface coils (5") and with dedicated sellar coils in the anterior neck. Slices were 5 mm thick, and acquired on the coronal, axial, and sagittal planes, with T1-weighting; axial scans were repeated in the same locations with double echoes, with proton-density and T2-weighting. Five patients underwent additional scans after Gd-DTPA. The larynx of a semi-frozen cadaver was examined with sellar surface coils, on similar scanning planes and with similar pulse sequences to those described above; the larynx was removed, investigated with mammographic technique, and subsequently analyzed with thin CT slices and a high-resolution reconstruction algorithm for the study of laryngeal cartilage. Axial anatomical sections were then compared with MR and CT scans, and the anatomical structures were recognized on the triplanar MR scans of a volunteer's larynx. Besides MR anatomy of supporting laryngeal structures, the authors describe in detail the muscles, plicae, spaces and cavities which can be identified on the various planes, together with the changes in signal after Gd-DTPA.


Subject(s)
Larynx/anatomy & histology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Contrast Media , Gadolinium DTPA , Humans , Organometallic Compounds , Pentetic Acid
6.
Radiol Med ; 78(4): 314-23, 1989 Oct.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2687961

ABSTRACT

Twenty-two patients who presented with laterocervical retromandibular enlargement were examined with both US and MR imaging to assess the intrinsic/extrinsic relationship of the mass to the parotid gland, the involvement of the facial nerve and adjacent structures, as well as the nature of the mass. Both US and MR imaging proved to be poorly specific in the characterization of the inflammatory lesions. Within the mass, both methods revealed high sensitivity (100%) in identifying the lesions, even very small ones. MR imaging allowed the lesion to be accurately located, the facial nerve to be identified, and its possible infiltration to be evaluated, with higher reliability than US, thanks to its higher contrast resolution and to its multiplanarity. Neither US nor MR imaging allowed the benign/malignant nature of the lesion to be assessed. On the basis of their experience, the authors suggest the use of T2-weighted MR sequences, with long TR and TE, to differentiate pleomorphic adenomas from other histotypes, after US assessment of the solid nature of parotid masses.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma/diagnosis , Adenoma/diagnosis , Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin/diagnosis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Parotid Neoplasms/diagnosis , Ultrasonography , Adult , Aged , Cysts/diagnosis , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Salivary Gland Diseases/diagnosis , Sialadenitis/diagnosis
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