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Ophthalmoplethysmography in Head and Neck Surgery

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1979
Ophthalmoplethysmography (OPG) is a simple, noninvasive diagnostic test in which the cerebral hemispheric blood flow can be indirectly measured. Its use in head and neck surgery is invaluable because it enables the surgeon to predict preoperatively whether a patient will survive carotid artery resection.
Michael B. Nolph   +3 more
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HEAD AND NECK SURGERY

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 1986
This six-volume series has been compiled to introduce current, up-to-date concepts concerning the diagnosis, evaluation, and management rationale of the various conditions that otorhinolaryngologists encounter in their clinics, hospitals, and operating rooms. It has been our goal to keep this information complete yet concise. -- Milind V.
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Complications of Head and Neck Surgery

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1971
The management of carcinoma of the head and neck can be associated with significant morbidity or mortality. However, vigorous measures are required to cure or salvage the patient with a tumor. Complications of head and neck surgery are reviewed in an attempt to reacquaint the surgeon with measures required in dealing more effectively with head and neck
Donald A. Shumrick, Alan D. Kornblut
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Head and neck surgery in the aged

The American Journal of Surgery, 1982
This study was carried out to determine the perioperative mortality rate of patients over the age of 65 years who are undergoing major head and neck resections under general anesthesia. The total number of patients was 810 and the perioperative mortality rate (death within 30 days of operation) was 3.5 percent (29 of 810).
John E. Hoopes   +3 more
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An Atlas of Head and Neck Surgery

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1974
An atlas of head and neck surgery , An atlas of head and neck surgery , کتابخانه دیجیتال جندی شاپور ...
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Chemoprophylaxis for Surgery of the Head and Neck

Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology, 1981
A prospective study of patients undergoing major head and neck cancer surgery was undertaken to 1) define the value of cefazolin prophylaxis in reducing the incidence of wound infection, 2) define the value of preoperative and intraoperative (perioperative) cultures in identifying the patient at high risk of wound infection and in predicting the ...
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Ethics in Head and Neck Surgery

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1981
Ethical problems have been a part of medicine since it became a cult, an art, and then a science. Ethics in surgery of the head and neck have developed a special poignancy because of the astounding advances in medical science and technology with their application to this exposed area of the body that is so intimately related to esthetics and ...
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Head and neck surgery

2014
In almost no other surgical specialty does use of a diagnostic screen have such prominence than when considering the diagnosis of a lump in the head or neck. Is the lump neoplastic and if so, is it likely to be of benign, malignant, or of mixed malignant potential?
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Complications in Head and Neck Surgery

Surgical Clinics of North America, 1986
Complications of the surgery for head and neck cancer may be catastrophic or noncatastrophic. Recognition of this is frequently as important as the method of resolution. A general classification of complications as anatomic, physiologic, technical, and functional will aid in recognition and prevention of these problems in this difficult group of ...
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Silicones in Head and Neck Surgery

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1966
IN HEAD and neck surgery, as in other areas, the silicones have been making an increasingly important contribution. They are being widely used as implants and also as adjuncts to medical and surgical procedures. Although a self-repairing, permanently functioning tissue graft would be the ideal implant material, yet the problems attendant upon its use ...
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