Soft tissue chondroma of palate is very rare. It has never been reported in a cleft palate patient. We report a case of 22-year-old male who came with asymptomatic swelling on the palate since birth, along with complete cleft of secondary palate. He had symptoms related to cleft palate only, i.e., nasal regurgitation and speech abnormalities. Swelling was excised and the cleft palate was repaired. Histopathological examination revealed chondroma of the palate. The patient had no recurrence after 2 years of follow-up.
In bilateral thumb amputations, the functional impairment is serious and every attempt should be made to reconstruct the thumb. We report a case of bilateral post traumatic thumb amputation, reconstructed with bilateral second toe transfer. Only two such cases have been reported in literature so far. Though there are various modalities for the reconstruction of thumb, microvascular toe transfer has its own merits. The convalescent period is minimal with excellent function. It is bilaterally symmetric and aesthetically superior to the osteoplastic reconstruction. The technical details are discussed, and the long term functional and aesthetic results are presented.
This case series of 51 patients (age range ¼ 11-17 years; 30-month follow-up) describes a new modified approach to treatment of distal and mid-penile hypospadias that has fewer complications. The meatal locations were sub-coronal (51%), coronal (45%) and mid-penile (4%). Forty patients had chordee. Urethra with the corpus spongiosum was dissected off the corpus cavernosum up to the peno-scrotal junction. The distal 5 mm stenotic and avascular part of the urethral tube was excised. The elastic urethra was then stretched and sutured to form a neo-meatus. The urethra was anchored to the Buck's fascia at the glandular, sub-coronal and mid-penile levels. Meatal regression in one patient (2%), subcutaneous hematomas in two patients (4%) and wound dehiscence in two patients (4%) were the complications in the immediate postoperative period. None developed fistula, meatal stenosis or residual chordee in the 30-month follow-up.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.