Contrary to some reports, the voice quality is minimally affected by laser surgery for T1a glottic carcinoma, and outcome is similar to radiotherapy. The average fundamental frequency is higher than normal after laser surgery, but the effect on the quality of life was trivial.
Except in one patient, no postoperative complications such as swelling or infection followed either harvesting or injection. After injection, phonation showed notable improvement that was maintained throughout follow-up.
Assessments using CT revealed that the decrease in volume of injected fat tissue was smaller in cases treated using b-FGF than in cases using the conventional method. No severe complications were encountered using this method.
Buccal fat cells were relatively smaller than abdominal fat cells and were not influenced by body mass index (BMI), showing less individual differences according to the physical features of the patient. Numbers of vascular endothelial cells tended to be higher in buccal fat tissues. The percentage of cases showing continuous effects for more than 6 months was slightly higher in cases using buccal fat.
Laryngeal lesions can be diagnosed by intralaryngeal ultrasonography using the filling method. Although it does not replace the combination of conventional endoscopy and a critical evaluation of the clinical symptoms of the individual disease, it can profitably complement them. Intralaryngeal ultrasonography can help in determining the extent of tumor involvement during microscopic laser surgery performed under general anesthesia. Confirmation of the results of this pilot study with a larger series of patients is desirable.
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