Transtympanic steroid therapy may be an alternative treatment for patients with SSNHL for whom systemic steroid therapy had failed or who could not tolerate systemic steroid therapy.
Recurrent respiratory papillomatosis (RRP) has been described to have a juvenile or aggressive form and an adult or less aggressive form. However, the aggressive form may occur in an adult and vice versa. Some authors have reported a quiescence in the juvenile form with the onset of puberty. In order to further characterize these two forms of RRP and to analyze the effects of puberty, we reviewed the records of 32 patients treated for RRP at our institution over a 10‐year period. We found that the aggressive form typically occurs in the very youngest of patients (average of 2 years old as compared to an average of 17 years old in the less aggressive form). Although subglottic involvement universally occurred in our group with aggressive disease, approximately 40% developed subglottic disease very early as compared with 20% of patients with less aggressive disease. Additionally, our data do not support the theory of spontaneous regression with the onset of puberty. These and other findings will be discussed in detail. We also propose a new classification for RRP to eliminate confusion.
Much has been written concerning complications of pediatric tracheotomies, but few studies have reviewed the complication rates of tracheotomies performed in the first 12 months of life. We reviewed the records of 60 patients who underwent tracheotomy in the first year of life between 1976 and 1988. This study includes 30 full-term infants and 30 premature infants, 16 of whom were very low birth weight preterm infants (less than or equal to 32 weeks' gestation and less than 1,500 g birth weight). Overall complication rates were 3% intraoperative, 13% early postoperative, and 38% late postoperative. The early postoperative complication rate in preterm infants was nearly double that of full-term infants. The late postoperative complication rate of patients undergoing tracheotomy for airway obstruction was more than double that of patients requiring tracheotomy for pulmonary indications. Duration of tracheotomy, however, was felt to be the most important factor in the development of a late postoperative complication.
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