IntroductionSupraglottic laryngeal cysts are benign, uncommon lesions that have the potential to cause airway compromise.Case PresentationWe present a case of a 46-year-old Caucasian woman who was scheduled for excision of a large neck growth (saccular cyst) and was managed successfully. There was thorough consideration regarding anesthetic and surgical management. Steps taken led to a successful excision with no recurrence during follow up.ConclusionThis case was an opportunity to consider the challenges in the airway management associated with such cysts and provided reassurance that excision of these cysts is associated with a good post-operative outcome.
Intratympanic gentamicin perfusion provides effective control of vertigo in patients with Ménière's disease. However, significant hearing loss may occur immediately after perfusion; therefore, this treatment should be considered only for patients whose hearing has already been affected by the disease.
Surgical management of subglottic laryngeal and upper tracheal stenosis remains a formidable challenge. The significant number of proposed techniques only highlights the difficulties associated with effectively managing this problem. Between 1996 and 1999, seven patients with stenosis of the upper trachea were treated. The stenosis resulted from long-term intubation during intensive-care hospitalization in five patients and from tracheotomy complications in the other two. Six patients were male and one female, their ages ranging between 13 and 60 years. The mean postoperative observation period was 3 years (1.5-4.5 years). In all patients, the stenosis exclusively involved the upper tracheal segment, measuring from 2 to 5 cm in length. The stenotic area of the trachea is exposed, and the local application of a solution of mitomicin C for a duration of 4 min is performed. A graft consisting of cartilage and mucosa is harvested from the nasal septum and is fixed with sutures to a titanium semiring. After the fixation of the graft on the ring, the entire construct is placed on the stenosed segment of the exposed trachea. The graft must cover the anterior exposed face of the trachea with the lateral members of the semicircular titanium ring adjacent to the lateral walls of the trachea, externally. The lateral tracheal walls are attracted laterally with sutures and are attached on the edges of the semicircular titanium ring. Four of the patients in whom no tracheotomy had been performed preoperatively needed none at all intraoperatively, and they were decannulated normally at the end of the procedure. Tracheotomy was deemed necessary for one patient's safety and was maintained for 7 days. In one patient with a pre-operative tracheotomy, the point of the tracheotomy was displaced lower on the trachea and was maintained there for 7 days. The course of management described here and employed on seven patients involves a safe surgical procedure with excellent results. The placement of the titanium ring offers very good support for the graft and maintains the patency of the tracheal lumen. The main reasons for the failure of techniques using only cartilage grafts are therefore avoided. The number of cases presented here is certainly too small to establish definite conclusions; however, the initial results are extremely satisfying and urge us to suggest the use of this method in indicated cases.
<p><strong>Objective</strong>. This report presents a unilateral branching pattern of the axillary artery (AA) represented by an unusual common trunk division, vessel multiplications and concomitant neural variations.</p><p><strong> Case Report</strong>. In a Greek male cadaver, the right AA branched into a subscapular trunk and two accessory lateral thoracic arteries of variable origin and course. Concomitantly, a high-level interconnection between the musculocutaneous and median nerves was identified, as an accessory lateral root of the median nerve. More interestingly, a rare innervation of the upper part of the latissimus dorsi muscle by a lower subscapular nerve was also revealed.</p><p><strong>Conclusion</strong>. In-depth knowledge of the typical and variant AA branching patterns and coexisting neural variations is of paramount importance for surgeons and interventional physicians, for a safer diagnosis and for performing uneventful procedures in that area.</p>
Laryngocele (LC) is an uncommon clinical entity, occasionally associated with fatal complications. If its neck becomes obstructed, mucous accumulates and then a laryngeal mucocele (LMC) is formed. Reports of LMCs are rare in the literature. A fluid-filled combined LMC in a 48 year-old Greek construction worker with presenting symptoms of cervical swelling and dysphonia is described. The male patient was surgically treated via an external approach. A LC rarely becomes symptomatic and infection unusually occurs. Magnetic resonance imaging depicts in detail the size, extension and structure of the neck mass and remains the diagnostic gold standard, providing superior soft-tissue discrimination, in cases of a concurrent laryngeal tumor. Histopathological examination confirms diagnosis, since there is always a high index of suspicion for malignancy. Established guidelines regarding surgical treatment of a LC do not exist. Although during the last two decades micro laryngoscopy with CO2 laser has gained popularity for the treatment of an internal LC, the external approach still remains the method of choice in cases of a combined LMC.
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