13 results on '"Tongue numbness"'
Search Results
2. A case report of lingual nerve injury after a prolonged laparoscopic cholecystectomy using supraglottic airway device (i-gel®)
- Author
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Mohamed Afifi and Stefan Cozma
- Subjects
Tongue numbness ,Supraglottic airway ,Lingual nerve ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background This is a case report of postoperative tongue numbness after a prolonged laparoscopic cholecystectomy using i-gel®. Case presentation A female patient 62 years old, ASA physical status II and with weight 72.7 kg, height 159 cm and BMI 28.8 kg/m2 had general anaesthesia using i-gel size 4 as artificial airway; vital data was stable and within normal range all through the surgery, the surgery was complicated due to the presence of intra-abdominal adhesions and the surgery was prolonged to 90 min With the insertion of surgical drains, she mentioned tongue numbness at the tip of the tongue on postoperative day 1, and this was completely resolved 4 weeks later on further follow-up. Conclusions We conclude that postoperative tongue numbness is one of the complications that should be highlighted after the i-gel®.
- Published
- 2023
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3. A case report of lingual nerve injury after a prolonged laparoscopic cholecystectomy using supraglottic airway device (i-gel®)
- Author
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Afifi, Mohamed and Cozma, Stefan
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Does early repair of trigeminal nerve injuries influence neurosensory recovery? A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Suhaym, O. and Miloro, M.
- Subjects
MANDIBULAR nerve ,TRIGEMINAL nerve ,LINGUAL nerve ,WOUNDS & injuries ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,NERVE grafting - Abstract
This systematic review and exploratory meta-analysis of the available evidence was performed to examine whether early nerve repair of lingual nerve (LN) and inferior alveolar nerve (IAN) injuries has an effect on neurosensory recovery. A literature search was conducted to identify relevant studies meeting the inclusion criteria. Two reviewers independently evaluated the methodological quality of the included studies and the risk of bias using the ROBINS-I quality assessment tool. For the quantitative analysis, data were pooled using the Mantel–Haenszel random-effects method due to the clinical heterogeneity across the studies. Sensitivity and subgroup analyses were performed based upon the group definition of timing from injury to nerve repair, with breakpoints of 2, 3, and 6 months. A total 1236 citations were identified, with a final 13 studies included in the systematic review. A clear definition of 'early' versus 'late' repair was not reported in six studies, allowing only seven to be included in the meta-analysis. The effect of early repair on functional sensory recovery was found not to be significant in nine studies, while four studies found a significant effect of early intervention. The meta-analysis showed a combined success rate of 93.0% for the early group and 78.5% for the late group. The odds of improvement were 5.49 (95% confidence interval 1.40–21.45) in the 3-month breakpoint studies and 2.28 (95% confidence interval 1.05–4.98) in the 6-month studies. A trend towards early repair achieving better functional sensory recovery outcomes was observed, but the specific time period is unknown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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5. Earlier recovery of lingual dysfunction after middle ear surgery in pediatric versus adult patients.
- Author
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Nishii, Tomoko, Nin, Tomomi, Maeda, Emi, Fukunaga, Akiko, Mishiro, Yasuo, and Sakagami, Masafumi
- Abstract
Objectives: It is generally thought that the recovery of damaged chorda tympani nerve (CTN) function after middle ear surgery is different in pediatric patients from that in adult patients. The purpose of this study was to investigate the changes and the progress of taste and somatosensory functions of the tongue after middle ear surgery in pediatric patients compared with those of adult patients. Study Design: Prospective study. Methods: Fifty‐nine pediatric patients and 106 adult patients underwent middle ear surgery. Taste and somatosensory functions of the anterior tongue, the so‐called CTN functions, were assessed using electrogustometry (EGM), a 2‐point discriminator, an electrostimulator, and a questionnaire before and 2 weeks and 6 months after surgery. Results: Two weeks after surgery, there was no significant difference in the incidence of dysgeusia and abnormal EGM thresholds between the patient groups. The incidence of tongue numbness was significantly lower in pediatric patients than in adult patients regardless of CTN manipulation. Although the lingual somatosensory thresholds of adult patients were significantly increased, those of pediatric patients were not increased. Six months after surgery, the incidences of dysgeusia and an abnormal EGM threshold were lower in pediatric patients than in adult patients. Tongue numbness disappeared, and the thresholds of lingual somatosensory tests returned to normal in most pediatric patients. Conclusion: Not only taste function but also lingual somatosensory function was damaged after middle ear surgery even in pediatric patients. Pediatric patients complained of tongue numbness less frequently and showed earlier recovery than adult patients. Level of Evidence: 2 Laryngoscope, 130:1016–1022, 2020 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Change of somatosensory function of the tongue caused by chorda tympani nerve disorder after stapes surgery.
- Author
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Maeda, Emi, Katsura, Hirokazu, Nin, Tomomi, Sakaguchi‐Fukunaga, Akiko, Mishiro, Yasuo, Sakagami, Masafumi, and Sakaguchi-Fukunaga, Akiko
- Abstract
Objectives: Patients after middle ear surgery often complain of taste disturbance and a lingual numbness. The purpose of this study was to objectively assess changes in the somatosensation of the tongue and taste function in patients undergoing stapes surgery.Study Design: Prospective study.Methods: Symptoms of taste disturbance and tongue numbness after surgery were investigated before and after surgery in 41 patients (13 males, 28 females; mean age 41.8 years) who underwent stapes surgery. Twenty-eight patients (9 males, 19 females; mean age 43.1 years) underwent sensory and taste function tests before and after surgery. Sensory function of the tongue was measured at the operated side and the nonoperated side using the 2-point discrimination test and an electrostimulator test. Taste function was assessed with electrogustometry (EGM).Results: The chorda tympani nerve (CTN) was gently touched or stretched in all patients. Postoperative thresholds on the operated side were significantly higher than preoperative thresholds in all tests in the patients who underwent all three kinds of tests. Tongue somatosensory symptoms improved significantly earlier than the taste disturbance postoperatively, and the sensory thresholds returned to the baseline along with recovery of symptoms.Conclusion: These findings suggest that dysfunction of the CTN occurred following surgery even when the CTN was preserved, and that the sensory nerve threshold of the tongue correlated with the symptom of lingual numbness. The CTN may play a role not only in taste function but also in the somatosensory function of the tongue.Level Of Evidence: 4. Laryngoscope, 128:701-706, 2018. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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7. Sialendoscopy-assisted intraoral incision approach for the treatment of posterior Wharton’s duct stones: our experience and outcomes
- Author
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Qing Bin Guan, Jin Li, Zhi Wen Lu, Ju Feng Chen, and Xiang Yang Xu
- Subjects
Original Paper ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Urology ,stone ,Gastroenterology ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Endoscopy ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,sialendoscopy ,wharton’s duct ,submandibular gland ,medicine ,Medicine ,Treatment effect ,Clinical efficacy ,Tongue numbness ,Intraoral incision ,business ,Duct (anatomy) - Abstract
Introduction Sialoliths can be removed by sialendoscopy in some cases. But sometimes it fails if the stone is located in the proximal or hilum of Wharton's duct. Aim To evaluate the clinical efficacy of the sialendoscopy-assisted intraoral incision approach to remove large stones located in the proximal or hilum of Wharton's duct, when sialendoscopy alone fails. Material and methods Twenty patients with large stones located in the proximal or hilum of Wharton's duct were included in our study. We used a sialendoscopy-assisted intraoral incision approach to remove large stones located in the proximal or hilum of Wharton's duct when endoscopy failed. The complications and treatment effect were observed. Results The stones were removed successfully in this way in all patients. Two cases had tongue numbness after the operation, and recovered 3 months later without additional intervention. No swelling or pain appeared during the 3-month to 1-year follow-up. Saliva could be observed from the orifice in 15 patients, with little or none in 5 patients. Conclusions The sialendoscopy-assisted intraoral incision approach to remove large stones located in the proximal or hilum of Wharton's duct is effective and safe.
- Published
- 2020
8. Taste Terms in the Patani Malay Ethnic Group
- Author
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Nuntana Wongthai
- Subjects
Taste ,General Arts and Humanities ,Ethnic group ,Spicy food ,Tongue body ,language.human_language ,Geography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Tongue pain ,Tongue ,language ,medicine ,Ethnology ,Tongue numbness ,Malay - Abstract
This paper reveals the concepts of taste in the Patani Malay ethnic group. Forty-five Patani Malays living in Pattani province, Yala province, and Narathiwat province participated in this study. The analysis uses the framework of componential analysis in ethnosemantics. The results show that there are ten basic taste terms in the Patani Malay dialect: /masɛ/ ‘sour’, /maseŋ/ ‘salty’, /manih/ ‘sweet’, /paheɁ/ ‘bitter’, /lɨcah/ ‘a little bit spicy and causing tongue pain’, /lɨta/ ‘unpleasant taste, sticking on the tongue and causing tongue numbness’, /khɨlaɁ/ ‘astringent’, /pɨdah/ ‘spicy’, /lɨmɔɁ/ ‘nutty’ and / tawa/ ‘bland’. All of them are distinguished by eight dimensions: taste buds, tongue side, tongue tip, acidity, tongue body, pain, tongue numbness, and nuttiness. Besides using each taste term individually to describe tastes of food, Patani Malays also use them repeatedly, combine each taste term together, and combine them with modifiers. From these ten basic taste terms, there are two taste terms that concern pain in the mouth and on the tongue. These are /lɨcah/ ‘a little bit spicy and causing tongue pain’ and /pɨdah/ ‘spicy’. This reflects the preference for spicy flavours in the Patani Malay ethnic group. It may be due to the influence of using spices and chili in cooking adopted from foreign countries since ancient times. It may also be due to the geographical characteristics of Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat provinces, which are located along the coast. People, therefore, prefer eating spicy food to keep their body warm and prevent illness.
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- 2019
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9. Tongue Numbness and Loss of Taste Following Sagittal Ramus Osteotomy of the Mandible
- Author
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Ceib Phillips, C. Holewa, Timothy A. Turvey, and Raymond P. White
- Subjects
Orthodontics ,Taste ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mandible ,Osteotomy ,Sagittal plane ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,medicine ,Surgery ,Tongue numbness ,Oral Surgery ,business - Published
- 2020
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10. Nonspecific Headache Diagnosed as a Brain Colloid Cyst with Hydrocephalus
- Author
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Christine Carroll and Mark Riddle
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Slurred speech ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Weakness ,Colloid cyst ,business.industry ,lcsh:Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,Case Report ,Emergency department ,lcsh:RC86-88.9 ,Emergency Nursing ,medicine.disease ,Hydrocephalus ,Surgery ,Neuroimaging ,Emergency Medicine ,medicine ,Tongue numbness ,Headaches ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
A 29-year-old male presented to our emergency department with complaints of a left frontal headache, similar to his prior headaches. He also reported about 30 minutes of facial and tongue numbness, left arm weakness, slurred speech and changes in hearing that had resolved prior to his arrival. Despite the short duration of the other neurologic symptoms, he also endorsed persistent “dizziness.” Despite his history of recurrent headaches, he had never had any neuroimaging. This, as well as his reports of new neurological symptoms, prompted his care team to obtain a non-contrast brain computed tomography. The findings were consistent with a mass with mild hydrocephalus. Patient underwent neurosurgical resection of the mass at a tertiary center. He did well after surgery and was discharged on postop day 6 with a diagnosis of colloid cyst.
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- 2017
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11. Chorda tympani nerve management in endoscopic stapes surgery
- Author
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Ahmed A. Omran, Ahmed Aly Ibrahim, Yasser Osman, and Wael K.A. Hussein
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Chorda ,Audiology ,Safe handling ,Taste sensation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,General Materials Science ,Tongue numbness ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,biology ,business.industry ,Oval window ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Stapes surgery ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Otosclerosis ,sense organs ,business ,Chorda tympani nerve - Abstract
Objectives To demonstrate different techniques in manipulating the chorda tympani nerve during endoscopic stapedotomy for otosclerotic patients. Materials Twenty patients presented with clinically diagnosed otosclerosis were randomly selected from outpatient ENT clinic in a tertiary referral Hospital over a period of 2 years (2013–2015) for endoscopic stapes surgery. Methods This prospective study demonstrates different management modalities of chorda tympani nerve in endoscopic stapes surgery according to the endoscopic anatomical relationship between the length of the chorda tympani nerve and the degree of scutum overhanging the oval window niche structures (endoscopic scutum- chorda tympani relationship). Results Three management techniques were carried out to deal with chorda tympani based on its endoscopic anatomical relationship with the scutum (no manipulation, upward-displacement, downward-displacement). All patients had significant improvement of postoperative hearing. Only 2 patients were managed by downward displacement technique had postoperative change in taste sensation and tongue numbness that improved over a period of 6 months. Conclusion trans -Canal fully endoscopic stapedotomy provides feasible and safe handling of the chorda tympani nerve with best postoperative taste sensation preservation.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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12. Earlier recovery of lingual dysfunction after middle ear surgery in pediatric versus adult patients.
- Author
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Nishii, Tomoko, Nin, Tomomi, Maeda, Emi, Fukunaga, Akiko, Mishiro, Yasuo, and Sakagami, Masafumi
- Abstract
Objectives: It is generally thought that the recovery of damaged chorda tympani nerve (CTN) function after middle ear surgery is different in pediatric patients from that in adult patients. The purpose of this study was to investigate the changes and the progress of taste and somatosensory functions of the tongue after middle ear surgery in pediatric patients compared with those of adult patients.Study Design: Prospective study.Methods: Fifty-nine pediatric patients and 106 adult patients underwent middle ear surgery. Taste and somatosensory functions of the anterior tongue, the so-called CTN functions, were assessed using electrogustometry (EGM), a 2-point discriminator, an electrostimulator, and a questionnaire before and 2 weeks and 6 months after surgery.Results: Two weeks after surgery, there was no significant difference in the incidence of dysgeusia and abnormal EGM thresholds between the patient groups. The incidence of tongue numbness was significantly lower in pediatric patients than in adult patients regardless of CTN manipulation. Although the lingual somatosensory thresholds of adult patients were significantly increased, those of pediatric patients were not increased. Six months after surgery, the incidences of dysgeusia and an abnormal EGM threshold were lower in pediatric patients than in adult patients. Tongue numbness disappeared, and the thresholds of lingual somatosensory tests returned to normal in most pediatric patients.Conclusion: Not only taste function but also lingual somatosensory function was damaged after middle ear surgery even in pediatric patients. Pediatric patients complained of tongue numbness less frequently and showed earlier recovery than adult patients.Level Of Evidence: 2 Laryngoscope, 130:1016-1022, 2020. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Tetrodotoxin poisoning caused by Goby fish consumption in southeast China: a retrospective case series analysis
- Author
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ShaoYang Lai, Wei Xia, YaJun Yue, FengLei Zhang, Jie You, and Feng Xing
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Veterinary medicine ,China ,Tetrodotoxin ,Perciformes ,Disease Outbreaks ,Gobies ,Foodborne Diseases ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tetrodotoxin poisoning ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Animals ,Humans ,Tongue numbness ,LC-MS/MS ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,lcsh:R5-920 ,biology ,Ecology ,Poisoning ,Goby ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Clinical Science ,Fish consumption ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry ,Toxicity ,Female ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,Chromatography, Liquid ,Fishes, Poisonous - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To investigate an unusual outbreak of tetrodotoxin poisoning in Leizhou, southeast China, a case series analysis was conducted to identify the source of illness. METHODS: A total of 22 individuals experienced symptoms of poisoning, including tongue numbness, dizziness, nausea and limb numbness and weakness. Two toxic species, Amoya caninus and Yongeichthys nebulosus, were morphologically identified from the batches of gobies consumed by the patients. Tetrodotoxin levels in the blood and Goby fish samples were detected using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. RESULTS: The tetrodotoxin levels in the remaining cooked Goby fish were determined to be 2090.12 µg/kg. For Amoya caninus, the toxicity levels were 1858.29 µg/kg in the muscle and 1997.19 µg/kg in the viscera and for Yongeichthys nebulosus, they were 2783.00 µg/kg in the muscle and 2966.21 µg/kg in the viscera. CONCLUSION: This outbreak demonstrates an underestimation of the risk of Goby fish poisoning. Furthermore, the relationships among the toxic species, climates and marine algae present should be clarified in the future.
- Published
- 2015
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