The Laryngoscope
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Surgical management of Bell's palsy.
Incomplete return of facial motor function and synkinesis continue to be long-term sequelae in some patients with Bell's palsy. The aim of this report is to describe a prospective study in which a well-defined surgical decompression of the facial nerve was performed in a population of patients with Bell's palsy who exhibit the electrophysiologic features associated with poor outcomes. In addition, management issues related to Bell's palsy including herpes simplex virus typel etiology, the natural history, electrodiagnostic testing, and efficacy of surgical strategies are reviewed. ⋯ Electroneurography in combination with voluntary EMG successfully identified patients who will most likely return to normal from those who had a greater chance of long-term sequelae from Bell's palsy. Surgical decompression medial to the geniculate ganglion significantly improves the chances of normal or near-normal return of facial function in the group that has a high probability of a poor result. Surgical decompression must be performed within 2 weeks of onset of total paralysis for it to be effective.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Safety and tolerability of the implantable recurrent laryngeal nerve stimulator.
The recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) stimulator has been implanted on a limited basis since 1988 for control of spasmodic dysphonia. A similar vagus nerve stimulator has been implanted in a larger series of patients to control epilepsy. The safety and tolerability of these two stimulators were evaluated. ⋯ All patients were monitored for vital signs, electrocardiographic changes, and adverse effects. The absence of changes in vital signs and electrocardiograms during vagal stimulation establishes the safety of this treatment. Since placement of the electrode around the vagus nerve is an easier surgical technique than placement deep to the RLN, it seems reasonable to change the technique to implant the stimulator on the vagus in patients with spasmodic dysphonia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Effectiveness of salvage neck dissection for advanced regional metastases when induction chemotherapy and radiation are used for organ preservation.
The recently completed VA Cooperative Study (CSP #268) of induction chemotherapy (cisplatin/5-FU) and definitive radiation (6600 to 7600 cGy) for organ preservation in advanced (stage III or IV) laryngeal cancer demonstrated that, although larynx preservation could be achieved in 64% of randomized preservation could be achieved in 64% of randomized patients, overall survival rates were not improved over conventional treatment (surgery/postoperative radiation). Of 166 patients randomized to induction chemotherapy, 46 had N2 or N3 disease and were analyzed to determine the effectiveness of the organ preservation treatment strategy on control of neck disease and survival. The clinical response of neck metastases to induction chemotherapy was significantly associated with subsequent salvage neck dissection (P = .008). ⋯ This was related primarily to failure to control the disease in the neck. The overall survival of patients achieving a complete response in the neck was improved over the randomized group of N2 or N3 patients treated with primary surgery. The findings suggest that response of neck nodes should be assessed independently of primary tumor response in trials of organ preservation strategies using induction chemotherapy, and that failure to achieve a clinical complete response in the neck warrants planned early salvage neck dissection in order to achieve improved overall survival.