Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Endoscopic ear surgery (EES) is a minimally invasive alternative to traditional ear surgery and is defined as the use of the rigid endoscope, as opposed to a surgical microscope, to visualize the middle and inner ear during otologic surgery. [1] During endoscopic ear surgery the surgeon holds the endoscope in one hand while working in the ear ...
Professor Stammberger teaching at the Tarabichi Stammberger Ear and Sinus Institute Professor Stammberger at the conclusion of one of his courses at TSESI.. Heinz Stammberger (1946-2018) was a German-Austrian teacher, and researcher in the field of sinus surgery and otolaryngology.
Using the endoscope as the main surgical instrument through the ear canal, or what's called: endoscopic ear surgery, pioneered by Professor Tarabichi. [25] There are multiple advantages for the use of the endoscope in cholesteatoma surgery: The endoscope's wide angle of view and the ability to "see around the corner". [26]
Given the greater access to the ear anatomy using endoscopic methods, it has been suggested that the bony part of the eustachian tube is really the anterior extension of the middle ear cavity, or the "Protympanum". The term "Eustachian Tube" should be limited to the fibrocartilaginous structure connecting the protympanum to the nasopharynx. [4]
Endoscopic Middle Ear Surgery, 1999 Jan; 108(1):39-46; Endoscopic Management of Acquired Cholesteatoma,1997 Sep; 18(5):544-9; Comparison of short nozzle and long nozzle spray in sinonasal drug delivery: a cadaveric study; Ear, Nose & Throat, 2019; 10.1177; Feasibility and Safety of Transtympanic Balloon Dilatation of Eustachian Tube
Foreign bodies can also be removed by endoscopy, which although requires general anesthesia does not require surgery and significantly decreases recovery time. [19] However, endoscopic foreign body retrieval is anatomically limited to objects lodged in the esophagus, the stomach or the colon. The condition in cattle is known as hardware disease.
Ear canal; Ear pain; Eardrum; Electric acoustic stimulation; Electrocochleography; Endoscopic ear surgery; Epitympanic recess; Eustachian tube; Evolution of mammalian auditory ossicles; Evolution of the cochlea
Endoscopic ear surgery; Endoscopic endonasal surgery; Endoscopic foreign body retrieval; Endoscopic laser cordectomy; Endoscopic mucosal resection; Endoscopic nasopharyngectomy; Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography; Endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty; Endoscopic stenting; Endoscopic submucosal dissection; Endoscopic third ventriculostomy