1,720,961 research outputs found

    Melanosis of the oral mucosal

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    The authors report a case of melanosis observed in the oral cavity of a female patient. The lesion was enlarged in three years involving most of the palatal mucosa. The histological examination suggested a typical picture of a benign lesion. The authors have been observing the patient for six months; during this time they did not notice any significant modification in the macroscopic and microscopic picture. Nevertheless, according to data of the literature, in spite of the apparently benign aspect of mucosal melanosis, these lesions can often degenerate into malignant melanomas. Therefore, the authors claim the opportunity to remove the mucosal melanosis as radically and soon as possible

    The treatment of acute recurrent pharyngotonsillitis

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    AIM OF THE STUDY: In paediatric patients, recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillitis is usually due to chronic inflammation of the tonsils and/or adenoids: these episodes are often associated with other clinical manifestations (respiratory obstruction of naso-pharyngeal origin; auricular inflammation, especially effusive otitis media and acute otitis media; streptococcal beta-haemolytic Group A (SBEGA) infection, causing a distant disorder of varying severity and which may, therefore, give rise to serious pathological conditions). A retrospective multicentric investigation has, therefore, been carried out in order not only to further elaborate findings emerging from earlier studies, performed in other countries, in which random methods were used, but also to focus on: 1. the possible association of these clinical manifestations with recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar inflammation in relation to frequency of the condition; 2. results obtained with adenoidectomy or with adeno-tonsillectomy, referring to the overall clinical outcome of the pathological condition, bearing in mind data emerging from the control groups, submitted to strict follow-up, associated with any medical treatment deemed necessary. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The study population comprised 692 patients (394 male, 298 female), age range 2-11 years and with a minimum follow-up of 2 years. Considering the clinical manifestations emerging from the case history, the following two investigations were carried out: 1. the first, on 501 patients, all previously submitted to adeno-tonsillectomy in whom the recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar inflammation had occurred, respectively > 4 or < or = 4 episodes during the last 12 months; 2. the second, on 455 patients in whom recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar inflammation, in the 12 months prior to the beginning of the study, had been < or = 4 episodes: in 264 cases, adeno-tonsillectomy was carried out; in 144, adenoidectomy; 47 children were studied as controls and, therefore, submitted to watchful waiting. The results obtained were statistically analysed by chi2 and Fisher test: a "p" value of < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. RESULTS: The first investigation showed that all symptomatological manifestations considered were resolved following adeno-tonsillectomy, in a significantly high percentage of cases (recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar in flammation: 91.8%; naso-pharyngeal respiratory obstruction: 92.2%; pathological ASO titre: 69.8%; distant disorders probably due to SBEGA: 76%; effusive otitis media: 76%; acute recurrent otitis media: 87.5%). The most interesting clinical findings obtained can be summarized as follows: naso-pharyngeal respiratory obstruction is a frequent finding; the incidence is statistically higher in cases in which recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar inflammation is less frequent (p < 0.05): in these patients, this is an important pathological manifestation indicating the need for surgery; the higher incidence is associated with at significant finding of pathological auricular processes; the percentages of recovery for naso-pharyngeal respiratory obstruction are statistically greater in the group of patients in whom the recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar inflammation is more frequent: an identical result is found in patients with the effusive form of otitis media and in those with recurrent acute otitis media; a pathological ASO titre is more frequently found, the difference being statistically significant (p < 0.05), in the group of patients with more frequent recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar inflammation, albeit this factor does not affect the percentage of recovery; also the favourable evolution and recovery of clinical distant manifestations, related to streptococcal beta-haemolytic Group A infection, are correlated with the return to normal of the ASO titre. The second investigation demonstrated the efficacy of surgical treatment, adeno-tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy, in all the clinical manifestations studied, the possibility of achieving resolution of recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar inflammation even in the control subjects submitted to medical treatment, but also the lack of success, in the latter, as far as concerns naso-pharygeal respiratory obstruction, the pathological ASO titre and the inflammatory auricular processes. CONCLUSIONS: The present investigations confirm previous observations emerging from randomized clinical studies, regarding the possibility to achieve valid prevention of recurrent febrile pharyngo-tonsillar inflammation, also in a large percentage of control patients submitted to watchful waiting; these investigations, however, also demonstrated that, in the control group, the percentage of subjects in whom recovery of other symptoms was achieved was very low compared to that in the groups submitted to surgery. In other words, clearly emerges as far as concerns the overall symptomatological picture of the patients, the efficacy of the surgical treatment, but also the lack of success of the medical treatments in all clinical manifestations associated with recurrent febrile inflammations. Therefore, it is necessary to select and advise the most suitable treatment strategy, not in relation to the Guidelines elaborated on the basis of results emerging from statistical research, that, due to the intrinsic methodology limits cannot be applied to all cases in an acritical fashion, but in relationship to the specific clinical picture of each individual patient

    Diagnosis of sensorineural hearing loss by ipsilateral masking of brain stem auditory evoked potentials

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    The Authors show their original technique for the differential diagnosis of cochlear and retrocochlear hearing loss which employs ipsilateral masking of the A.B.R. in order to define the difference in V wave latency between a standard technique (clicks at 21 pps without noise) and a sensitized technique (clicks at 21 pps with noise at S/N of +40). This difference in latency has been named Sensitizing Latency Difference (SLD). Sixty normal subjects, 85 patients with cochlear hearing loss and 6 with retrocochlear hearing loss, were studied. The obtained data showed a SLD value: in normal hearing of: a) 0.31 msec. (+/- 0.14 SD) from 18 to 40 years old; b) 0.36 msec. (+/- 0.26 SD) from 41 to 60 years old; c) 0.48 msec. (+/- 0.21 SD) over 60 years old; in patients with cochlear hearing loss 0.12 msec. (+/- 0.14 SD) in 2 subjects affected by retrocochlear hearing loss a value superior to 1.5 msec. in the other 4 cases the V waves disappeared during recording of the sensitized test. A differential value of 1 msec. between cochlear and retrocochlear hearing loss was established by the Authors who with this value correctly identified all the patients with retrocochlear hearing loss and 97.8% of the subjects with cochlear hearing loss. An incorrect diagnosis of the hearing loss origin (false positives) was made in 2.2% of the patients with cochlear hearing loss. In conclusion, the Authors feel that the SLD evaluation, in consideration of its large clinical utility and of the high reliability of obtained data, is a particularly useful test in making a differential diagnosis between cochlear and retrocochlear hearing loss

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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