Image by Pharos of Wikipedia In 2013, a man rented a bicycle from New York City's Citi Bike program. Apparently while riding this rental bike, the front wheel struck a wheelstop installed near a bicycle docking station which the man did not notice, flipping him resulting in head trauma. This head trauma resulted in permanent smell and taste loss. [ link ] The wheelstop is meant to prevent cars from from backing into bike stations, but the lawsuit alleges "no cones or colored wa…
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Home » Archives for March 2014
March 30, 2014
March 24, 2014
30% of Patients with Reflux will NOT Respond to Medications
- at 3/24/2014
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
Specifically, patients who are suffering with throat symptoms of reflux will often not respond to proton-pump inhibitor (PPI) medications. Such throat symptoms include throat-clearing , phlegmy throat , cough , hoarseness, and globus . Known as LPR (laryngopharyngeal reflux), a study was done measuring the pH at the throat level after 4+ weeks of twice daily PPI. This retrospective study found that although 67.4% had symptom normalization, 32.6% of patients showed no subjective or ob…
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March 22, 2014
Device that Allows Intubated Patients to Talk
- at 3/22/2014
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
Image by Calleamanecer in Wikipedia There is nothing worse than to be very sick. It's even worse if you are intubated in the ICU (intensive care unit) being poked and prodded constantly. Traditionally, such sick intubated patients (if alert) will communicate by writing on a clipboard which is often frustrating to not just the patient, but also family members and healthcare professionals trying to care for the patient. However, NEJM reported on the use of an electrolarynx to allow …
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March 21, 2014
How Ears Tune In and Out Certain Sounds
- at 3/21/2014
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
Ever wonder how humans with normal hearing are able to "hear" what one person is saying in a crowded room where many people are talking? How is it that the ear is able to tune in and out of conversations going around, especially when everybody in a room is talking equally loud? To understand this ear "tuning" ability, one needs to first understand that the ear incorporates two "aspects" that allow for good hearing: a volume knob and an antenna. Should the volum…
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cochlear ,
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hair cell ,
hearing ,
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inner ear ,
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March 07, 2014
LeBron James and His Broken Nose
- at 3/07/2014
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
LeBron James suffered a broken nose. He first broke it Feb 2014 when playing against Oklahoma City. He than got hit to the nose again (while wearing a mask) when playing against Houston in March 2014. [ link ] Regardless of whether you are an NBA player or not, treatment of most nasal and even facial fractures do NOT require surgical repair. The key elements that lead towards a decision for facial and/or nasal fracture surgery are the following (not all-inclusive, but general pointe…
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Permanent Hearing Loss From Noise May Depend on Time of Day!
- at 3/07/2014
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
Research out of Sweden have discovered that noise-induced hearing loss sustained at night is more likely to become permanent than if it occurred during the day... at least in mice. Apparently, there are certain genes found to cycle in the cochlea of mice in a pattern that followed the hours of the day. By measuring the auditory nerve activity, they found that mice exposed to moderate noise levels during the night suffered from permanent hearing loss while mice exposed to similar noise leve…
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March 04, 2014
Infant Sound Machines for Sleep May Cause Hearing Loss
- at 3/04/2014
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
As a father of two young kids who still use a sound machine to help them sleep, I was quite curious about a recent paper that warned that such devices may cause permanent hearing loss. Researchers compared a total of 65 sounds produced by 14 machines and measured the maximum sound level at a distance of 30 cm (crib-rail placement), 100 cm (beside crib placement), and 200 cm (across room placement). Why is placement important? When it comes to risk of hearing loss due to loud noise exp…
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March 03, 2014
Flushing Ears with Cold Water Can Treat Somatoparaphrenia
- at 3/03/2014
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- By Fauquier ENT
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- 0 COMMENTS
Somatoparaphrenia is a condition whereby a person denies that a limb or an entire side of the body belongs to them, even if provided with irrefutable proof. This condition usually is accompanied by left-sided paralysis and anosognosia (denial or lack of awareness) of the paralysis often due to a parietal stroke. What is interesting is that flushing the left ear with cold water (caloric vestibular stimulation) can temporarily treat/resolve somatoparaphrenia. Specifically, the protocol is fl…
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