Results 161 to 170 of about 5,666 (185)
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Surgical Treatment of Dacryocystitis

AORN Journal, 1997
ABSTRACTDacryocystitis is a common infection of the lacrimal sac. In adults, dacryocystitis results from an obstruction (ie, dacryostenosis) of the nasolacrimal duct. Dacryocystitis can be either an acute or chronic infection, and both forms usually are unilateral in nature.
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Management of congenital dacryocystitis

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 1972
One hundred and fifty cases of congenital dacryocystitis are analysed. Epiphora alone should be treated conservatively with local massage and antibiotics. Syringing and probing should be done in all cases of purulent discharge. The best results are obtained when it is done in the first year of life, and where the duration of discharge is less than 2 ...
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Diagnosis and Treatment of Dacryocystitis

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1929
Diseases of the lacrimal sac belong to the sphere of the ophthalmologist, who should manage the case, make the diagnosis, decide on the treatment, and accept the assistance of the rhinologist only for the performance of operative technique. Roentgenography of the lacrimal passages, after injection of substances opaque to the x-ray, is painless, and ...
Louis Daily, Ray K. Daily
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Pediatric Acute Dacryocystitis

Ophthalmic Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, 2015
To review and summarize the symptomatology, microbiology, special clinical entities, management, complications, and outcomes of pediatric acute dacryocystitis.The author performed a PubMed search of all articles published in English on acute dacryocystitis.
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Outcome of transcanalicular laser dacryocystorhinostomy with endonasal augmentation in acute versus post-acute dacryocystitis

Eye, 2022
R. Goel   +7 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Dacryoadenitis, Dacryocystitis, and Canaliculitis

2020
Dacryoadenitis may be infectious or non-infectious in etiology (non-specific orbital inflammation of the lacrimal gland), present in a similar fashion and may be difficult to distinguish from one another in the early phase. Dacryocystitis commonly presents with tearing, redness, swelling and a tender mass over the nasolacrimal crest area and generally ...
Bazil Stoica, David R. Jordan
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DACRYOCYSTITIS

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1944
The problem of dacryocystitis is not one for the ophthalmologist or the rhinologist alone, but for both specialists. The patient's first complaint is that of tearing. This usually brings him to the ophthalmologist. There has been too much dissension over who is the proper authority.
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TREATING DACRYOCYSTITIS IN THE NEWBORN

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1941
To the Editor: —In the December 1940 issue of theArchives( 24 : 1256 [Dec.] 1940) is a clinical note entitled "A Simple Method of Treating Dacryocystitis in the Newborn" by Archimede Busacca. For many years I have probed the tear drainage apparatus in Children with this condition, being certain that the probe gets into the nose and that it is not ...
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Acute Dacryocystitis

New England Journal of Medicine, 2018
Jennifer Hoffmann, Susan Lipsett
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THE TREATMENT OF CONGENITAL DACRYOCYSTITIS

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1923
The term "congenital dacryocystitis" is a misnomer. The condition develops after birth, and not before, and is not a true inflammation of the sac wall, but an infection of the retained excretions from the conjunctival sac. The condition that predisposes to this postnatal infection, however, is congenital in the sense that there has been a delay in ...
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