Results 181 to 190 of about 23,333 (243)
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Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America, 2004
Laryngeal reinnervation refers to any of a number of surgical procedures intended to restore neural connections to the larynx, which have usually been lost from some type of trauma (eg, surgical). The nerve function(s) to be restored may be those of the recurrent laryngeal nerve or its subdivisions, those of the superior laryngeal nerve, or both, and ...
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Laryngeal reinnervation refers to any of a number of surgical procedures intended to restore neural connections to the larynx, which have usually been lost from some type of trauma (eg, surgical). The nerve function(s) to be restored may be those of the recurrent laryngeal nerve or its subdivisions, those of the superior laryngeal nerve, or both, and ...
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Muscle & Nerve, 1990
AbstractAlthough great empasis is placed on providing a satisfactory conduit for regeneration of peripheral axons after nerve repair, the quality of functional restoration is influenced as much by the quality as the quantity of axonal regeneration. Misdirected regeneration is so commonly encountered that motor axons appear to enter and regenerate to ...
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AbstractAlthough great empasis is placed on providing a satisfactory conduit for regeneration of peripheral axons after nerve repair, the quality of functional restoration is influenced as much by the quality as the quantity of axonal regeneration. Misdirected regeneration is so commonly encountered that motor axons appear to enter and regenerate to ...
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The Laryngoscope, 1976
AbstractBilateral vocal cord paralysis is fortunately an uncommon occurrence although the incidence of this injury secondary to external neck trauma is increasing. In general, a patient with this lesion is faced with the choice between adequate airway at the expense of a breathy, weak voice or a fairly good voice with the need for a permanent ...
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AbstractBilateral vocal cord paralysis is fortunately an uncommon occurrence although the incidence of this injury secondary to external neck trauma is increasing. In general, a patient with this lesion is faced with the choice between adequate airway at the expense of a breathy, weak voice or a fairly good voice with the need for a permanent ...
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Spontaneous Trigeminal-Facial Reinnervation
Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1990Although spontaneous recovery of denervated facial muscles has been anecdotally recorded in the clinical setting, it has never been fully documented. The establishment of anastomoses between the terminal trigeminal and facial nerves provides a possible explanation of this phenomenon.
M D, DeLacure, C T, Sasaki, L G, Petcu
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Delayed laryngeal reinnervation
Clinical Otolaryngology and Allied Sciences, 1998Objective. To test the feasibility of selective abductor reinnervation with a delay period of 9 months after transectionof the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN). Successful laryngeal abductor function restoration has been achieved in the cat model, using the phrenic nerve (PN) to reinnervate the abductor muscle, in the acute phase, but in clinical ...
null Van Lith-Bijl, null Mahieu
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Diaphragm reinnervation by laryngeal motoneurons
Journal of Applied Physiology, 1993Inspiratory activity of the paralyzed diaphragm was restored by reinnervation with brain stem laryngeal motoneurons. In 10 anesthetized cats, the right recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) was cut and anastomosed to the distal stump of either one or both roots (C5-C6) of the ipsilateral phrenic nerve.
Baldissera, F +3 more
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Reinnervation in duchenne muscular dystrophy
Muscle & Nerve, 1983AbstractMotor neuron abnormalities have been implicated in the pathogenesis of Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Evidence concerning the effect of injury on motor neurons of human Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is lacking. We report a DMD patient having, in addition, an obstetric paresis on his left arm.
A, Dubrovsky, A L, Taratuto
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Newer Techniques of Laryngeal Reinnervation
Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology, 1989We relate the experience obtained in the use of the right superior laryngeal nerve (motor branch)–cricothyroid muscle pedicle flap in dogs in an attempt to reinnervate the right posterior cricoarytenoid muscle (PCA). The right vocal cord was paralyzed by severance and removal of 2.5 cm of the right recurrent laryngeal nerve.
A J, Maniglia +4 more
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Reinnervation of pulmonary stretch receptors
Journal of Applied Physiology, 1987The Breuer-Hering reflex (BHR) reappears 12–14 wk after surgical lung denervation in beagle dogs (J. Appl. Physiol. 54: 1451–1456, 1983). To demonstrate that this is due to reinnervation of pulmonary stretch receptors, we recorded nerve activity from regenerated branches of the left vagus nerve in five beagle dogs. Ten days postdenervation the BHR was
P S, Clifford +3 more
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Reinnervation of the Trapezius Muscle
Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, 1988The eleventh cranial nerve shoulder syndrome, which results from denervation of the trapezius muscle, contributes significantly to the postoperative morbidity of radical neck dissections. Multiple techniques exist for the reinnervation of muscles that have injured motor nerves.
D W, Eisele +3 more
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