1.Making Z shape for mucosal layer of the vestibule of nose to repair congenital malformation of the cleft of lip and nose in secondary time
Journal of Practical Medicine 2003;439(1):29-30
From 1998 to 1999, congenital malformation of nose in 25 subjects (6 male, 19 female, aged 11-23) were repaired after a plastic surgery. All subjects were examined for assessing the malformation, 3 photographic images of 3 positions were taken before and after the operation and after 6 months, 12 months follow up. The repairing surgery must be conducted at the age of 13-19 years. Vastibulary membrane must be conserved persistently after the first time of repairing and in the secondary time of repairing the malformation. It is necessary to repair the soft tissues covering the conserved cartilege. Making X shape on vestibulary membrane contributes to make plastic repairing of the frame of cartilage better
Vestibule
;
abnormalities
;
Lip
;
surgery
;
Surgery, Plastic
4.Mechanism of Downbeat Nystagmus While Normal Subjects HaveHead Upside-down Position in Darkness.
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2000;18(6):716-720
BACKGROUND: Bohmer and Straumann have proposed that downbeat nystagmus is due to an asymmetry of the geometry of the vertical semicircular canals of the vestibular labyrinth. This hypothesis does not predict any sustained change in vertical nystagmus when subjects are placed in a head-upside-down position. METHODS: Using the magnetic search coil technique, I measured vertical eye movements in darkness in three normal human subjects while they maintained head-erect or head-upside-down positions. RESULTS: Two subjects had upbeat nystagmus and one downbeat nystagmus with their heads erect (slow-phase velocity < 1 deg/sec). All developed sustained nystagmus with quick phases directed towards their chins while in the head-upside-down position. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that factors other than canal imbalance - otolithic or ocular - may also cause downbeat nystagmus.
Cerebellum
;
Chin
;
Darkness*
;
Eye Movements
;
Head
;
Humans
;
Nystagmus, Pathologic
;
Otolithic Membrane
;
Semicircular Canals
;
Vestibule, Labyrinth
5.The Influence of Cigarette Smoke on the Epithelium of the Vestibule: an Electron Microscopic Study.
Mukaddes ESREFOGLU ; Erol SELIMOGLU ; Muammer ESREFOGLU ; Ozgen VURALER
Yonsei Medical Journal 2003;44(4):703-709
It is known that cigarette smoke induces cytological alterations on the respiratory and olfactory mucosa of the nasal cavity. We evaluated whether cigarette smoking had adverse effects on the epithelium of the vestibule, in the absence of any published ultrasutructural studies. We evaluated ten patients suffering from septum deviation, eight of whom were long-term smokers. While each layer of the epithelium obtained from the non-smokers consisted of a homogeneous cell population, each from the long-term smokers consisted of a heterogeneous cell population. The most prominent changes occurred in the shape and size of the cells and nuclei, the number and length of the cytoplasmic projections, the number and distribution pattern of the desmosomes, and the width of the intercellular spaces. We concluded that cigarette smoke produces hyperplastic and dysplastic changes, important factors related with cancer development, on the epithelium of the vestibule.
Adult
;
Case-Control Studies
;
Epithelium/ultrastructure
;
Human
;
Male
;
Microscopy, Electron
;
Smoking/*adverse effects
;
Vestibule/*ultrastructure
6.Neuronal plasticity of otolith-related vestibular system.
Suk-King LAI ; Chun-Hong LAI ; Fu-Xing ZHANG ; Chun-Wai MA ; Daisy K Y SHUM ; Ying-Shing CHAN
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2008;30(6):741-746
This review focuses on our effort in addressing the development and lesion-induced plasticity of the gravity sensing system. After severance of sensory input from one inner ear, there is a bilateral imbalance in response dynamics and spatial coding behavior between neuronal subpopulations on the two sides. These data provide the basis for deranged spatial coding and motor deficits accompanying unilateral labyrinthectomy. Recent studies have also confirmed that both glutamate receptors and neurotrophin receptors within the bilateral vestibular nuclei are implicated in the plasticity during vestibular compensation and development. Changes in plasticity not only provide insight into the formation of a spatial map and recovery of vestibular function but also on the design of drugs for therapeutic strategies applicable to infants or vestibular disorders such as vertigo and dizziness.
Animals
;
Humans
;
Neuronal Plasticity
;
Neurons
;
physiology
;
Otolithic Membrane
;
innervation
;
physiology
;
Vestibule, Labyrinth
;
innervation
;
physiology
8.Normal values of vestibular autorotation test in young people.
Lei ZHANG ; Bo GAO ; Li-Yi WANG ; Wei-Ning HUANG
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2008;30(6):663-667
OBJECTIVETo explore the normal values of vestibular autorotation test (VAT) in young people.
METHODSVAT was performed in 31 young people aged 20-30 years. The measured value were analyzed and compared with the reference normal value.
RESULTSThe measured values of VAT in healthy young people are almost within the normal range of the general population. Compared with the reference normal values, the horizontal gains at 2.0, 2.3, 2.7, 5.5, and 5.9 Hz, the vertical gains at 2.0 and 5.9 Hz, and the vertical phases at 2.0, 2.3, 2.7, 3.1, 3.5, and 3.9 Hz were significantly different (P < 0. 05). No significant difference was shown in the horizontal phases and asymmetry.
CONCLUSIONSThe normal values of VAT in young people is within the reference normal range of the general population. The vestibular function of young people may be more sensitive in lower frequency range (2-3Hz).
Adult ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Reference Values ; Vestibular Function Tests ; standards ; Vestibule, Labyrinth ; chemistry ; physiology ; Young Adult
9.Histologic Changes of Lateral Semicircular Canal after Transection and Occlusion with Various Materials in Chinchillas.
Tae Hoon KIM ; Boo Hyun NAM ; Chan Il PARK
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 2002;45(4):318-321
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Partial resection of vestibular labyrinth has a great interest to all otologists and neurotologists. Various materials have been applied for occlusion of semicircular canals with different postoperative hearing results. However, the most suitable material for occlusion has not determined yet. Authors tried to compare the occlusion materials through a histologic study in experimental animals. MATERIALS AND METHOD: The lateral semicircular canal (LSCC) was transected, and the canal lumens were occluded with bone dust, muscle or bone wax in chinchillas. Thresholds for the auditory brainstem response (ABR) were measured after occlusion for two months, and histologic changes of LSCC were observed. RESULTS: Periosteal osteogenesis at the surgical defects of LSCC and perilymphatic fibrosis in the canal lumen were remarkable in the bone dust and muscle groups. The bone wax group showed minimal osteoneogenesis and some degree of perilymphatic inflammation (serous labyrinthitis). CONCLUSION: This study showed complications of each occlusion material. The proper selection of an occlusion material based on its characteristics seems to be important for a successful partial labyrinthectomy.
Animals
;
Chinchilla*
;
Dust
;
Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem
;
Fibrosis
;
Hearing
;
Inflammation
;
Osteogenesis
;
Semicircular Canals*
;
Vestibule, Labyrinth
10.A Case of Intravestibular Lipoma Presenting with Sudden Hearing Loss.
Eun Jae LEE ; Seong Ki AHN ; Dong Gu HUR ; Ho Yeop KIM
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 2013;56(1):34-36
Intracranial lipomas are unfrequent tumors developed from mesenchymatous cells. The corpus callosum is the most frequent location (50%) in the intracranial regions, and these tumors are rarely present in the cerebellopontine angle, the internal acoustic meatus, or intravestibular lesions. With a review of literature, authors report a rare case of the left-sided intravestibular lipoma presented as sudden hearing loss in 17-year-old female. Furthermore, differential diagnostic magnetic resonance imaging characteristics of lipomas are discussed in detail.
Acoustics
;
Cerebellopontine Angle
;
Corpus Callosum
;
Female
;
Hearing Loss, Sudden
;
Humans
;
Lipoma
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Vestibule, Labyrinth