Users Online: 2379
Home
About us
Editorial board
Search
Browse articles
Submit article
Ahead of Print
Instructions
Subscribe
Contacts
Special issues
Login
» Articles published in the past year
To view other articles click corresponding year from the navigation links on the side bar.
All
|
Brief Communication
|
Brief Reports
|
Case Report and Literature Review
|
Case Reports
|
Commentary
|
Editorial
|
Erratum
|
Letter to Editor
|
Letters to Editor
|
Meta Analysis
|
Notice of Retraction
|
Original Article
|
Original Articles
|
Original Empirical Article
|
Research Articles
|
Review Articles
|
Review Report
|
Short Communications
|
Systematic Review
|
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Export selected to
Endnote
Reference Manager
Procite
Medlars Format
RefWorks Format
BibTex Format
Show all abstracts
Show selected abstracts
Export selected to
Add to my list
Case Report:
Dysphonia, Stridor, and Dysphagia Caused By Diffuse Idiopathic Skeletal Hyperostosis: Case Report and Review of Literature
Mohammad Zarei, Mohammadreza Golbakhsh, Mohsen Rostami, Mersad Moosavi
Adv Biomed Res
2020, 9:47 (30 September 2020)
DOI
:10.4103/abr.abr_50_20
Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) also known as Forestier disease is a noninflammatory, systemic skeletal disease of unknown etiology. DISH is usually asymptomatic but may compress the posterior wall of the aero digestive tract and lead to dysphagia, globus, hoarseness, stridor, dyspnea, and neurological problems. Although dysphagia is not uncommon among the presenting symptoms of DISH but dysphonia and stridor are rarely reported. We report a 68-year-old man who presented with a history of progressive dysphagia over 1 year and recent dysphonia and stridor secondary to cervical osteophytes. We discuss the symptoms, radiological features, and management of this uncommon case of DISH in conjunction with review of literature.
[ABSTRACT]
[HTML Full text]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
[Citations (2) ]
[Sword Plugin for Repository]
Beta
Case Report:
Anesthesia Management in a Patient with Unclassified Cardiomyopathy for Transureteral Lithotripsy Surgery
Payman Rezagholi, Arvin Barzanji, Aida Lahorpoor
Adv Biomed Res
2020, 9:46 (30 September 2020)
DOI
:10.4103/abr.abr_33_20
Anesthesia management has always been challenging in cardiac patients, especially patients with cardiomyopathy. There are a variety of cardiomyopathies such as unclassified cardiomyopathy as a complex type that can occur in many forms like left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) that is an uncommon primary genetic cardiomyopathy typified by noticeable trabeculation of the left ventricular (LV) wall and intertrabecular recesses. We report anesthesia management in a 53-year-old female patient who admitted to the hospital for the transureteral lithotripsy surgery due to dysuria and urolithiasis with a medical history, and echocardiographic examination indicated the diagnosis of hypertension and unclassified cardiomyopathy (LVNC).
[ABSTRACT]
[HTML Full text]
[PDF]
[Mobile Full text]
[EPub]
[Sword Plugin for Repository]
Beta
Feedback
Subscribe
Advanced Search
Month wise articles
Figures next to the month indicate the number of articles in that month
2023
April
[
1
]
March
[
1
]
February
[
2
]
January
[
2
]
2022
December
[
2
]
November
[
1
]
October
[
3
]
August
[
1
]
April
[
2
]
January
[
3
]
2021
December
[
1
]
November
[
1
]
October
[
1
]
September
[
2
]
2020
December
[
1
]
November
[
2
]
September
[
2
]
August
[
4
]
July
[
1
]
June
[
1
]
2019
November
[
1
]
September
[
2
]
May
[
1
]
March
[
1
]
January
[
1
]
2018
December
[
1
]
November
[
1
]
September
[
1
]
July
[
1
]
June
[
2
]
May
[
4
]
April
[
1
]
March
[
2
]
February
[
1
]
January
[
1
]
2017
December
[
2
]
October
[
1
]
August
[
1
]
July
[
2
]
June
[
1
]
May
[
1
]
March
[
2
]
February
[
1
]
2016
December
[
3
]
September
[
1
]
August
[
1
]
April
[
2
]
March
[
4
]
January
[
1
]
2015
August
[
4
]
July
[
1
]
May
[
1
]
March
[
2
]
February
[
5
]
January
[
3
]
2014
December
[
4
]
November
[
3
]
September
[
2
]
August
[
1
]
July
[
1
]
June
[
2
]
March
[
2
]
February
[
1
]
January
[
11
]
2013
November
[
1
]
July
[
2
]
June
[
1
]
March
[
9
]
2012
October
[
2
]
August
[
3
]
July
[
3
]
May
[
3
]
Sitemap
|
What's New
Feedback
|
Copyright and Disclaimer
|
Privacy Notice
© Advanced Biomedical Research | Published by Wolters Kluwer -
Medknow
Online since 15 January, 2012