Results 171 to 180 of about 106,632 (215)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Revision Lateral Skull Base Surgery
Otology & Neurotology, 2006To describe functional and reconstructive results after revision lateral skull base surgery with comparison of benign and malignant lesions.Retrospective case review.Tertiary referral center.All patients undergoing revision surgery for benign and malignant lateral skull base tumors.Surgical resection of recurrent lateral skull base tumors and ...
David M, Kaylie +5 more
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2011
Over the past several decades, advancements in many areas of clinical medicine have facilitated the progress and application of surgical intervention for lesions of the skull base. The skull base, the floor of the cranial cavity, is the most inferior portion of the skull.
David E. Traul, Thomas N. Pajewski
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Over the past several decades, advancements in many areas of clinical medicine have facilitated the progress and application of surgical intervention for lesions of the skull base. The skull base, the floor of the cranial cavity, is the most inferior portion of the skull.
David E. Traul, Thomas N. Pajewski
openaire +1 more source
Pediatric endoscopic skull base surgery
Current Opinion in Otolaryngology & Head & Neck Surgery, 2010Pediatric endoscopic skull base surgery (ESBS) has changed the current management of pediatric sinonasal and skull base disorders. This review focuses on the recent literature exploring pediatric ESBS, including its utility and limitations.Pediatric ESBS has been established as a safe and feasible technique for a variety of disease states.
Patrick D, Munson, Eric J, Moore
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Complications of Skull Base Surgery
Clinics in Plastic Surgery, 1995The increasing number of patients undergoing resection of complex skull base lesions with good outcome is indicative of the interest and expertise in treating tumors of the skull base. Advances in surgical techniques and improved knowledge of the microanatomy have contributed to the ability to manage these tumors aggressively.
T T, Nguyen, J B, Delashaw
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Skull‐Base Surgery: Operative Refinements
Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, 1986Advances in microsurgical techniques, with the use of the laser and the ultrasonic suction aspirator, have paved the way for even more aggressive surgical approaches to large skull‐base lesions, such as glomus tumors, adenocarcinomas of the temporal bone, and cranial nerve neuromas. Postoperative morbidity of multiple cranial nerve dysfunction has been
A J, Gulya +5 more
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Current Opinion in Oncology, 1995
The management of tumors arising from or, by extension, involving the skull base is complex due to the density and sensitivity of nearby neurovascular structures, the proximity of these structures to the relatively contaminated spaces of the paranasal sinuses or ear and mastoid, the varied pathologic entities encountered, and the relative lack of ...
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The management of tumors arising from or, by extension, involving the skull base is complex due to the density and sensitivity of nearby neurovascular structures, the proximity of these structures to the relatively contaminated spaces of the paranasal sinuses or ear and mastoid, the varied pathologic entities encountered, and the relative lack of ...
openaire +2 more sources
The American journal of otology, 1982
Surgical inaccessibility, the obstacles of vital neural and vascular anatomy, and the overwhelming surgical mortality rate as a result of hemorrhage and sepsis have led surgeons to approach lesions of the skull base with understandable reluctance.
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Surgical inaccessibility, the obstacles of vital neural and vascular anatomy, and the overwhelming surgical mortality rate as a result of hemorrhage and sepsis have led surgeons to approach lesions of the skull base with understandable reluctance.
openaire +2 more sources
2019
Cranial base surgery is the surgical discipline that deals with disease processes that affect the skull base or related tissues. These include developmental, inflammatory, traumatic, vascular, and neoplastic problems. Over the last 30 years, there has been a radical transformation of cranial base surgery with parallel advances in diagnostic modalities,
Carl H. Snyderman +4 more
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Cranial base surgery is the surgical discipline that deals with disease processes that affect the skull base or related tissues. These include developmental, inflammatory, traumatic, vascular, and neoplastic problems. Over the last 30 years, there has been a radical transformation of cranial base surgery with parallel advances in diagnostic modalities,
Carl H. Snyderman +4 more
openaire +1 more source

