9 results on '"Broadhurst MS"'
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2. 532 nm pulsed potassium-titanyl-phosphate laser treatment of laryngeal papillomatosis under general anesthesia.
- Author
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Burns JA, Zeitels SM, Akst LM, Broadhurst MS, Hillman RE, and Anderson R
- Published
- 2007
3. Effects of 532 nm pulsed-KTP laser parameters on vessel ablation in the avian chorioallantoic membrane: implications for vocal fold mucosa.
- Author
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Broadhurst MS, Akst LM, Burns JA, Kobler JB, Heaton JT, Anderson RR, and Zeitels SM
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Office-based 532-nm pulsed KTP laster treatment of glottal papillomatosis and dysplasia.
- Author
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Zeitels SM, Akst LM, Burns JA, Hillman RE, Broadhurst MS, and Anderson RR
- Abstract
Objectives: Treatment of glottal papillomatosis and dysplasia was mirror-guided and done in surgeons' offices in the 19th century. It migrated to the operating room in the 20th century to accommodate direct laryngoscopic surgery, which required assistants to administer anesthesia and procedural support. The primary treatment goals, which are disease regression and voice restoration and/or maintenance, are tempered by the morbidity of general anesthesia and potential treatment-induced vocal deterioration. To obviate general anesthesia, office-based laser laryngeal surgery was first done in 2001 with the 585-nm pulsed dye laser (PDL), because it employs a fiber delivery system and its energy is selectively absorbed by oxyhemoglobin. Since then, this new angiolytic laser treatment paradigm has become a mainstay of management for many surgeons; however, there are a number of shortcomings of the PDL. To further develop this concept and address the limitations of the PDL, we used a 532-nm pulsed potassium titanyl phosphate (KTP) laser.Methods: A prospective assessment was performed on 48 patients in 72 cases of recurrent glottal dysplasia (36) or papillomatosis (36). All individuals had previously undergone microlaryngoscopic management with histopathologic evaluation.Results: Two dysplasia patients did not tolerate the procedure. Of the treatable dysplasia cases, there was follow-up in 29 of 34. Disease regression was at least 75% in 18 of 29 cases (62%), 50% to 75% in 7 of 29 (24%), and 25% to 50% in the remaining 4 of 29 (14%). Papilloma patients returned for treatment when symptoms recurred, so disease regression could not be assessed accurately. Similar to data obtained with the PDL, these data confirmed that dysplastic mucosa could normalize without resection.Conclusions: Our observations revealed that the 532-nm pulsed KTP laser provided enhanced performance over the PDL laser in a number of ways. The ability to use smaller glass fibers precluded mechanical trauma to the channels of the flexible laryngoscopes and allowed for improved suctioning of secretions. Oxyhemoglobin absorbs energy better at 532 nm than at 585 nm, and the KTP laser can be delivered through a longer pulse width. These factors provide enhanced hemostasis and improved intralesional energy absorbance. Finally, unlike the PDL, the KTP laser is a solid-state laser and is not prone to mechanical failure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Chick chorioallantoic membrane as a model for simulating human true vocal folds.
- Author
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Broadhurst MS, Kobler JB, Burns JA, Anderson RR, and Zeitels SM
- Subjects
- Adult, Animals, Chick Embryo, Chorioallantoic Membrane surgery, Humans, Laser Therapy methods, Lasers, Dye, Microcirculation physiology, Vocal Cords surgery, Chorioallantoic Membrane embryology, Microsurgery methods, Models, Biological, Otorhinolaryngologic Surgical Procedures methods, Vocal Cords blood supply
- Abstract
Objectives: Evolving photoangiolytic laser techniques for treating vocal fold lesions motivated the development of a model for research and surgical training. The chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM), which is composed of a microvasculature suspended within the egg albumen, simulates the vocal fold microcirculation within the superficial lamina propria (SLP). To characterize this model, we compared measurements of vessel diameters to superficial vessels in human vocal folds., Methods: The diameters of first-, second-, and third-order CAM vessels were measured in fertilized chicken eggs. The superficial blood vessels of the human vocal fold were measured from intraoperative images., Results: According to the branching pattern, vessel segments were identified as first-, second-, or third-order, with average diameters of 0.035 mm (0.02 to 0.1 mm), 0.18 mm (0.12 to 0.41 mm), and 0.8 mm (0.6 to 0.98 mm), respectively. The total vessels measured included 362 first-order, 119 second-order, and 82 third-order vessels. In 10 adult human vocal folds, an average vessel diameter of 0.04 mm (0.015 to 0.1 mm) was observed in 50 vessels., Conclusions: The CAM microvasculature suspended in albumen provides a useful surgical model simulating the microcirculation within the SLP of the human vocal fold. Although first-order CAM vessels best approximate the size of normal vocal fold subepithelial vessels seen at surgery, second- and third-order vessels resemble the vascular abnormalities frequently encountered during microsurgery for phonotraumatic lesions.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Microflap laryngosplasty for treating an anterior-commissure web with papillomatosis.
- Author
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Akst LM, Broadhurst MS, Burns JA, and Zeitels SM
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Laryngeal Neoplasms pathology, Papilloma pathology, Prosthesis Design, Treatment Outcome, Laryngeal Neoplasms surgery, Laryngoscopy methods, Microsurgery methods, Papilloma surgery, Prosthesis Implantation instrumentation, Surgical Flaps, Surgical Mesh
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- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Office-based and microlaryngeal applications of a fiber-based thulium laser.
- Author
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Zeitels SM, Burns JA, Akst LM, Hillman RE, Broadhurst MS, and Anderson RR
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Laryngoscopy, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Prospective Studies, Ambulatory Surgical Procedures, Laryngeal Diseases surgery, Larynx surgery, Laser Therapy, Thulium
- Abstract
Objectives: The carbon dioxide (CO2) laser is the premier dissecting instrument for hemostatic cutting and ablation during endolaryngeal surgery. However, microlaryngeal tangential dissection and office-based photoablation have been limited by the lack of a fiber-based delivery system. To address this limitation, a new laser was designed, which is a diode-pumped solid-state laser with a thulium-doped yttrium-aluminum-garnet laser rod. It produces a continuous-wave beam with a wavelength of 2013 nm and a target chromophore of water. This new laser functions similarly to a CO2 laser with the benefit of being delivered through a small glass fiber (0.365 to 0.550 mm)., Methods: A prospective pilot trial was done in 74 cases to explore applications of the new thulium laser. Thirty-two procedures were done with the laser used as an ablating instrument and topical anesthesia through a flexible laryngoscope (papillomatosis, 20; microinvasive carcinoma, 6; benign supraglottic lesions, 3; edema, 2; granuloma, (1). Forty-two procedures were done with the laser used as a cutting or ablating instrument for microlaryngeal dissection and general anesthesia. These included 27 partial laryngeal resections (supraglottis, 15; glottis, 10; subglottis, (2) and 8 posterior glottic laryngoplasties. The laser was also used as an ablative instrument during microlaryngoscopy in 7 cases., Results: The thulium laser was used effectively in all cases, under both local and general anesthesia. In microlaryngeal dissection, electrocautery was not needed to control bleeding, even during cutting in the highly vascular paraglottic space. No complications related to the use of the thulium laser were experienced in any case., Conclusions: Because of the fiber-based delivery system, the 2013-nm continuous-wave thulium laser shows substantial promise for tangential dissection during microlaryngoscopy and soft tissue photoablation during office-based flexible laryngoscopy. Hemostasis was judged to be superior to experiences with the CO2 laser. In this pilot study, performing en bloc laryngeal cancer resection procedures was facilitated by use of the thulium laser.
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- 2006
- Full Text
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8. Comparison of a flexible laryngoscope with calibrated sizing function to intraoperative measurements.
- Author
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Kobler JB, Rosen DI, Burns JA, Akst LM, Broadhurst MS, Zeitels SM, and Hillman RE
- Subjects
- Adult, Calibration, Humans, Laryngeal Diseases surgery, Larynx pathology, Larynx surgery, Observer Variation, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Video Recording, Fiber Optic Technology, Laryngeal Diseases pathology, Laryngoscopes, Larynx anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Objectives: The objectives were to assess the clinical performance and accuracy of a prototype fiberoptic transnasal laryngeal endoscope with an auxiliary optical system that allows images to be spatially calibrated., Methods: A novel fiberoptic endoscope was developed that projects green laser beams across the field of view from a separate optical channel. According to the location of the spots in the field of view, the images can be calibrated with a software routine. To assess its performance, we compared measurements of 14 lesions imaged with the calibrated endoscope and during microlaryngoscopy, where a calibration instrument was placed next to the lesions. Four clinicians measured lesion length, width, and area from the collected images., Results: The calibrated endoscope performed as well as current flexible fiberoptic laryngoscopes in terms of image quality and patient comfort. For lesions with well-defined borders, the error ranged from 14% to 23% for length, from 20% to 30% for width, and from 33% to 50% for area across observers. Factors contributing to larger errors in some subjects were identified., Conclusions: The calibrated endoscope is capable of providing useful sizing information for laryngeal structures, and these measures correspond quite well to more direct measurements in the operating room. Objective sizing of laryngeal lesions is complicated by subjective judgments of lesion boundaries, which can be indistinct in many cases.
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- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Pulsed angiolytic laser treatment of ectasias and varices in singers.
- Author
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Zeitels SM, Akst LM, Bums JA, Hillman RE, Broadhurst MS, and Anderson RR
- Subjects
- Dilatation, Pathologic surgery, Endoscopy, Female, Hemoptysis etiology, Hemoptysis prevention & control, Hemoptysis surgery, Hoarseness etiology, Humans, Laryngoscopy, Male, Microcirculation pathology, Microcirculation surgery, Music, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Vocal Cords pathology, Voice Disorders etiology, Laser Therapy methods, Varicose Veins surgery, Vocal Cords blood supply, Vocal Cords surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: Varices and ectasias in singers are typically the result of phonotraumatic shearing stresses and/or collision forces on the microcirculation within the superficial lamina propria. These lesions can be debilitating in performing vocalists because of the effect of recurrent hemorrhage and/or as a contributing factor to the morbidity of other mass lesions such as polyps, nodules, and cysts. Phonomicrosurgical treatment of performers is understandably approached with great trepidation, as the vocal liability of surgically disturbing the superficial lamina propria and epithelium must be balanced with the inherent detrimental vocal effect(s) of the lesion(s). Pulsed angiolytic lasers that emit radiation at high absorbance peaks of oxyhemoglobin were examined to determine whether they were an efficacious treatment approach for ectasias and varices based on these lasers' mechanisms of action and prior experience in phonomicrosurgery., Methods: A prospective trial was done in 39 patients (40 procedures in 54 vocal folds) without complication to evaluate the effectiveness of a 585-nm pulsed dye laser (PDL; 25 cases) and a 532-nm pulsed KTP laser (15 cases) in a noncontact mode to treat 65 varices and 43 ectasias. Twenty-nine of 39 patients had varices and ectasias associated with other phonotraumatic mass lesions that required resection., Results: All patients have resumed full vocal activities, and no patient has had a subsequent hemorrhage or vocal deterioration., Conclusions: Both the 585-nm PDL and the 532-nm pulsed KTP laser were found to be efficacious and relatively safe treatment modalities for vascular abnormalities of the vocal folds in singers. Noncontact selective photoangiolysis of the aberrant vessels prevented future bleeding without substantial photothermal trauma to the overlying epithelium and surrounding delicate superficial lamina propria, thereby allowing for optimal postoperative mucosal pliability and glottal sound production. However, the pulsed KTP laser was substantially easier to use because of its enhanced hemostasis due to its longer pulse width. Vessel wall rupture was commonplace during use of the 585-nm PDL, but rarely occurred during photoangiolysis with the 532-nm pulsed KTP laser.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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