Summary Vascular diseases are a major threat to human health nowadays. Hypertension, cardiovascular disease and varicose vain disease including hemorrhoids, are now increasingly recognized as ...inflammatory diseases. The role of inflammation cytokines in the pathogenesis of these diseases is very important. The lamina propria in the nasal mucosa is rich in blood vessels and humoral mediators. Recurrent epistaxis from Kiesselbach’s area syndrome (REKAS) was first mentioned as early as 1985. It has been found that 90% of patients suffering from recurrent epistaxis from Kiesselbach area syndrome simultaneously suffered from hemorrhoids. Clinical observations suggest a possible mutual pathophysiologic relationship between Kiesselbach’s and anorectal venous plexus. This relationship is also suggested in the reverse direction: significantly more than two thirds of primarily hemorrhoidal patients (83.01%) showed simultaneous vascular dilatations within their Kiesselbach plexuses, but none of these patients had ever have recurrent nose bleeds. There is one more thing they did not have (contrary to REKAS group) - anterior septal deformity. Furthermore, REKAS and hemorrhoidal disease, despite being different clinical entities, frequently appear in the primarily REKAS patients or their closest relatives (more than 90% out of all!). At the same time, all of REKAS patients did have a certain degree of the anterior septal deformity, which primarily hemorrhoidal patients did not have at all. Therefore we presume that Kiesselbach’s vascular plexus in the Little’s area of the nasal septum belongs to the same group as anorectal venous plexus does (others of this group are brain, esophagus, and lower leg venous system). We also presume that the anterior septal deformity is a crucial factor for the onset of the inflammation of the nasal vestibule skin (vestibulitis nasi), while vestibulitis nasi precipitates the onset of typical recurrent nose bleeds from the Kiesselbach’s plexus.
Background Skin defects on the nasal dorsum remain a challenge for the plastic surgeon. There are few local nasal flap options for the repair of proximally positioned nasal skin defects.
Methods ...During a 3‐year period, 22 patients were treated after excision of skin cancer in the proximal two‐thirds of the nose. Nine patients (41%) were female and 13 (59%) were male, with an average age of 69 years. All patients were operated on under local anesthesia. The average follow‐up was 25 months.
Results In all patients, after tumor ablation, the skin defect was closed with an island composite nasal skin flap. Pathohistologic analysis confirmed that the margins of the removed tumor were free of malignant cells. Six patients (27.3%) had squamous cell and 16 (72.7%) had basal cell carcinoma. There was no total or partial flap loss. None of the patients has suffered from recurrence of the tumor.
Conclusions The island composite nasal flap is a reliable technique for the closure of proximal nasal skin defects. Complications in the elevation of the island composite flap were rare, and the final result was acceptable.
Abstract Objectives Suffocation due to foreign bodies (FB) is a leading cause of death in children aged 0–3 and it is common also in older ages, up to 14 years old. Based on the RPA report the ...estimated number of incidents per year in children aged 0–14 is in European Union (EU) of approximately 50,000, 10% of which are fatal. The need of an improvement of knowledge led to the development of the pan European study ESFBI (European Survey on Foreign Bodies Injuries) that collected data on FB injuries in the aerodigestive tract in paediatric patients from 19 European Hospitals (Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Greece, Italy, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Swiss, Turkey and United Kingdom). Recognizing that the rapid management is one of the main goals in the presence of such injury the aim of this paper is to confront data coming from 4 ESFBI case series with a Thailand's case series, in order to broaden the knowledge on FBs injuries characteristics, knowing that features like shape, dimension, consistency are fundamental in determine the consequences that might occur. Methods Data coming from the Siriraj Hospital, Thailand from June 2006 to 2010 were collected and compared with 4 case series chosen amongst the ESFBI study cases (Finland, Slovenia, Sweden and Turkey). Results 172 cases were collected from the Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok, Thailand. The chosen ESFBI members were Finland, Sweden, Slovenia and Turkey, with a sample numerosity respectively of 307, 235, 104 and 196 cases. All countries showed a male prevalence higher than the female one, and injuries occurred most frequently in children younger than 3 years old. The most frequent retrieval location was the digestive system (oesophagus) in Thailand data (97 cases, 56.40% of cases), whilst European cases involved more frequently the nose in Slovenia (58.65%), Finland (37.79% of cases) and Sweden (54.47%). In Turkey's case series, the highest prevalence of cases interested the airways. In Thailand and Finland case series, the main FB's type were represented by bones (respectively 66 case, 38.37% and 48 cases, 15.64%), whilst pearl, ball and marble were the most frequent FB both in Slovenia (16, 15.38%) and Sweden (83, 35.32%). Turkey case series had nuts, seeds and grain as most prevalent FB (126, 64.29%). Conclusions The nature of foreign bodies varies from country to country and is dependent on diverse cultural, social, religious and economic factors that include parental attitudes, eating habits, availability and types of potentially threatening objects, and prevention strategies. The need to study in more depth specific characteristics of foreign bodies associated with increased hazard, such as nature, size, shape, hardness or firmness, lubricity, pliability and elasticity, in order to better identify risky foods and to describe more precisely the pathogenetic pathway is therefore a necessity.
Summary Surveillance studies have shown that cleft lip and palate is one of the commonest craniofacial anomalies, occurring in approximately 1 in 500 live births. Previous studies on craniofacial ...form in unilateral cleft lip/palate subjects have been carried out, but most attention has been focused on the deformity of the bony septum whereas the deformities of the nasal spine and cartilaginous component of the septum had received little attention. Our recent study was based on monitoring a very specific type of nasal septal deformity, type 6, and its relation to the unilateral cleft lip/palate disease. This type is very anteriorly located and refers to the cartilaginous part of the nasal septum and the inter-maxillary bone itself. Rhinoscopic view shows a typical, almost horizontal, unilateral groove at the nasal septum located very anteriorly. At the opposite septal side, but corresponding location, there is so called basal crest. The results of our study showed that the incidence of type 6 septal deformity was very high not only in unilateral cleft lip/palate children (80.6%) but also in their parents (58% in at least one of them). In contrast, in our previous study this type of septal deformity was seen in only 3.7% of non-unilateral cleft lip/palate children before puberty, rising to 7.4% in students and 9.4% in adults. In other words, perhaps we can expect the onset of unilateral cleft lip/palate in the offspring of parents who both have a type 6 septal deformity. Perhaps there is a gene responsible for the onset of both type 6 septal deformity and the cleft. If these clinical entities belong to the same gene, the cleft per se could perhaps disappear from the Earth in a near future owing to the gene therapy which will be able to eliminate it before the baby is born or even conceived.
Abstract Foreign body (FB) inhalation, aspiration or ingestion are relatively common events in children. Despite many efforts made in several countries to achieve acceptable safety levels for ...consumer products devoted to children, small toys or toy parts are still frequently mentioned among risky foreign bodies. The aim of the present study is to characterize the risk of complications and prolonged hospitalization due to toys inhalation, aspiration or ingestion according to age and gender of patients, FB characteristics, circumstances of the accident, as emerging from the Susy Safe Registry. The Susy Safe Registry started in the 2005 to collect data to serve as a basis for a knowledge-based consumer protection activity. It is actually one of the wider databases collecting foreign body injuries in the upper aero-digestive tract in pediatric patients. It is distinguished by a deep characterization of objects which caused the injuries and a multi-step quality control procedure which assures its reliability. Preventive strategies imposing a regulation of industrial production, even if fundamental, are not sufficient and need to be integrated along with other intervention addressed to make aware caregivers toward a proper surveillance of children.
Summary Background The overall incidence of pathological septal deformity has been found to be significantly higher in unilateral cleft lip/palate (UCLP) children than in control children. Of the ...seven types of septal deformity according to Mladina's classification, type 6 has been found to be the most frequent in UCLP children, occurring in only 3.7% of the control children. Objective To investigate the incidence of type 6 septal deformity in the parents of UCLP children. Patients and methods UCLP children ( N = 62) and their parents ( N = 91) were examined for type 6 septal deformities. Results Type 6 was found in at least one parent of a UCLP child in 58% of cases. However, it was not found in the parents whose UCLP children did not show a type 6 septal deformity. Conclusion Type 6 septal deformity is almost a rule in children suffering from UCLP. Type 6 was not seen in the parents whose UCLP children did not show a type 6 septal deformity. There is a morphogenetic predisposition for the development of CLP in children whose parents carry a type 6 septal deformity.
The occurrence of foreign bodies (FB) in otorhinolaryngological practice is a common and serious problem among pediatric patients. The aim of this work is to characterize the risk of complications ...and prolonged hospitalization due to FBs in the nose in terms of the characteristics of the injured patients (age, gender), typology and features of the FBs, the circumstances of the accident and the hospitalization's details.
A retrospective study of FB associated injuries, assessing the characteristics of the injured child and the FB, the circumstances of the accident and finally the hospitalization details took place on children aged 0-14 in major hospitals of 19 European countries.
In total 688 cases were assessed. Complications and hospitalization occurred in 59 and 52 cases, respectively. Over 51% of patients were females. The median age of children who experienced a complication was four years. In the majority of cases FB removal was accomplished by means of a non-invasive technique (rhinoscopy with a nasal speculum or rigid fiberoptic endoscope. The majority of children were directly referred to the ENT department. The most common FBs associated with complications and hospitalization were nuts, seeds, berries, corn and beans, batteries and other inorganic objects such as broken parts of pens, paper clips and pearls. Over 38% of the injuries occurred under adults' supervision.
FB injuries in the nose are commonly encountered in clinical practice. Even if the presence of a FB is not usually life threatening, it may result in long-term complications such as perforation of the septum. Because the risks associated with FB injuries, public education about this problem is recommended.