About The Book

Laryngology: A Case-Based Approach

Laryngology: A Case-Based Approach is an invaluable new text for clinicians and students covering evidence-based assessment and management of a full range of laryngological conditions. This unique text examines 55 common and rare cases and covers pediatric and adult patients. The cases are separated into four sections: pediatric, voice and airway, general/systemic, and dysphagia/swallowing.

Key Features

• More than 300 figures, most in full color, including surgical photos, endoscopic images, pathological micrographs, and various process charts/diagrams and decision trees.
• More than 30 video and audio files
• Laryngology’s leading experts have contributed their knowledge, expertise and experience to discuss the varied management options as they see it.

The book also comes with access to a PluralPlus companion website, where readers can access video and audio files to enhance their understanding of cases in the book.

With its multitude of cases and related multimedia, Laryngology: A Case-Based Approach is must-have resource for otolaryngologists, laryngologists, phoniatricians, speech-language pathologists, as well as anesthesiologists with an interest in managing the difficult airway.

About The Authors

Laryngology: A Case-Based Approach

Jacqueline Allen, FRACS is a Laryngologist practicing in Auckland, New Zealand.  A graduate of the University of Auckland, Dr Allen worked in the United Kingdom before completing her specialist ORL training in 2007.  She then undertook Fellowship training at the Voice and Swallow Centre, University of California, Davis where she specialized in Voice and Dysphagia utilizing modern in-office techniques, endoscopy and laser surgery.  She returned to New Zealand in 2010 and established the Auckland Voice and Swallow Centre, and the Swallowing Lab at University of Auckland where these techniques have been put to use.  Dr Allen is a Board Member of the American Bronchoesophagological Association, Dysphagia Research Society, Laryngology Society of Australasia and is Section Editor of Current Opinion in Otolaryngology.  She has published more than 55 journal articles, 10 book chapters and is a reviewer for many international peer-reviewed journals.  She currently lives with her husband and daughter in Auckland.

S. A. Reza Nouraei, MBBChir, PhD, FRCS, FRCS (ORL-HNS) is the Robert White Professor of Laryngology and Clinical informatics at Southampton University and a consultant surgeon at the Robert White Centre for Airway Voice and Swallowing in Poole, England. He studied sensorimotor neurophysiology and medicine at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and received higher surgical training in academic otolaryngology in London followed by an International Fellowship in Laryngology and Airway Surgery in Auckland, New Zealand. His clinical practice is exclusively focused on laryngology and his research efforts are divided between apnoeic nasal ventilation (Transnasal Humidified Rapid-Insufflation Ventilatory Exchange [THRIVE] which he first described with Anil Patel), big data analytics, and surgical invocation. 

Guri S. Sandhu, MBBS, MD, FRCS, FRCS (ORL-HNS), hon FRAM, is an ENT Surgeon, working out of Imperial College in London. He has a special interst in voice, airway and swallowing problems, with a large practice managing the problems experienced by professional voice users from stage, music and media. He is ENT surgeon to the Royal Society of Musicians and, for his services to music, he has been made Honorary Fellow at the Royal Academy of Music. Mr Sandhu has one of the largest practices in the world managing damaged airways and has carried out extensive research and poineered new surgical approaches. This has led to a Doctorate of Medicine (MD), as well as numerous research articles, book chapters and books. He is an enthusiastic teacher, lecturing and running workshops, nationally and internationally. He is co-founder of the British Laryngological Association and one of a few invited to be Corresponding Fellow to the American Laryngological Association.

Table Of Contents

Laryngology: A Case-Based Approach

 

Section I. Pediatric

 

Chapter 1. Congenital Stridor

Christopher T. Wooten

 

Chapter 2. Laryngomalacia

Lluís Nisa and Kishore Sandu

 

Chapter 3. Laryngeal Cleft

Sophie G. Shay, Douglas Sidell, and Dinesh Chhetri

 

Chapter 4. Laryngeal Webs

Hannah Burns

 

Chapter 5. Pediatric Post-Intubation Airway Stenosis

Sarah N. Bowe and Christopher J. Hartnick

 

Chapter 6. Long-Segment Tracheal Stenosis

Michael J. Rutter and Claudia Schweiger

 

Chapter 7. Subglottic Haemangioma

James Johnston and Jacqueline Allen

 

Chapter 8. The Drooling Child

Silvia G. Marinone-Lares and Murali Mahadevan

 

Chapter 9. Supraglottic Cystic Lesion

Georgina Harris

 

Chapter 10. Pediatric Pharyngoesophageal Trauma Leading to Phagophobia

Mandy Henderson and Anna Miles

 

Chapter 11. Caustic Substance Ingestion in Children: New Management Strategies Versus Traditional Approaches

Ibrahim Uygun

 

Section II. Voice and Airway

 

Chapter 12. Phonotrauma Management

C. Blake Simpson and Raymond Brown

 

Chapter 13. Phonotrauma

VyVy N. Young

 

Chapter 14. Dysphonia and Hemorrhage in Singers

Kristina Piastro

 

Chapter 15. Vocal Fold Scar

Lesley F. Childs and Ted Mau

 

Chapter 16. Chronic Laryngeal Inflammation

Andree-Anne Leclerc and Clark A. Rosen

 

Chapter 17. Reinke’s Edema

Ken Mackenzie

 

Chapter 18. External Laryngeal Trauma

S.A. Reza Nouraei and Natasha Quraishi

 

Chapter 19. Laryngitis

Aaron J. Jaworek, Kranthi Earasi, and Robert T. Sataloff

 

Chapter 20. Tuberculosis of the Larynx

Nick Gibbons

 

Chapter 21. Recurrent Respiratory Papillomatosis Disease Progression in Pregnancy

Paul C. Bryson and Faez H. Syed     

 

Chapter 22. Vocal Granuloma

Declan Costello

 

Chapter 23. Anterior Glottic Webs

Matthew Broadhurst

 

Chapter 24. Assessment and Management of Vocal Fold Paresis in a Singer

Lisa D’Oyley, Emily Wilson, and Albert Merati

Chapter 25. Early Laryngeal Carcinoma Involving the Anterior Commissure

Mark G. Watson and Omar Mulla

 

Chapter 26. Laryngeal Dysplasia and Early Glottic Cancer

Valeria Silva Merea, Rebecca C. Nelson, and Michael S. Benninger

 

Chapter 27. Laryngeal Leukoplakia

Natasha Quraishi and Michael Petrou

 

Chapter 28. Irradiated Larynx and Voice Issues

Timothy M. McCulloch and Matthew R. Hoffman

 

Chapter 29. Laryngeal Chondrosarcoma
Jahangir Ahmed and Chadwin Al Yaghchi

 

Chapter 30. Bilateral Vocal Fold Mobility Impairment
Colin R. Butler

 

Chapter 31. Bilateral Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Injury and Selective Laryngeal Reinnervation
Kate J. Heathcote

 

Chapter 32. Atypical Spasmodic Dysphonia with Tremor

Daniel Novakovic

 

Chapter 33. Dysphonia in the Elderly
Hagit Shoffel-Havakuk and Michael M. Johns III

Chapter 34. Functional (Adaptive) Dysphonia: Considerations in Evaluation and Treatment
Rebecca Leonard

 

Chapter 35. Episodic Laryngeal Breathing Disorders

Andrée-Anne Leclerc and Clark A. Rosen

 

Chapter 36. Exercise-Induced Laryngeal Obstruction
Emil Schwarz Walsted, Andrew J. Kinshuck, and James H. Hull

Chapter 37. Inducible Laryngeal Obstruction

J. Selby and James H. Hull

Chapter 38. Treatment of Idiopathic Subglottic Stenosis During Pregnancy

Robert J. Morrison and Alexander Gelbard

Chapter 39. Intubation-Related Tracheal Stenosis

S.A. Reza Nouraei

Chapter 40. Rare Complication of a Percutaneous Tracheostomy

Aphrodite Iacovidou and Taranjit Singh Tatla

 

Chapter 41. Management of the Airway in Thyroid Disease

Jahangir Ahmed and Alasdair Mace

 

Section III. General/Systemic

 

Chapter 42. A Case of a Upper Respiratory Infection, Reflux, and Persistent Cough

Anne E. Vertigan

 

Chapter 43. Globus

Jacqueline Allen

 

Chapter 44. Anterior Glottoplasty for Voice Feminization
Marc Remacle and Anna Pamela C. Dela Cruz

 

Chapter 45. The Larynx in Systemic Inflammation

Angela Zhu, Jason Rudman, and David E. Rosow

 

Chapter 46. Pemphigus Vulgaris

Theodore Athanasiadis and Kimon Toumazos

 

Chapter 47. Relapsing Polychondritis and the Airway

Andrew J. Kinshuck and James H. Hull

 

Section IV. Dysphagia/Swallowing

 

Chapter 48. Impaired Laryngeal Response to Cough Reflex Testing

Maggie-Lee Huckabee, Phoebe Macrae, and Emma Wallace

 

Chapter 49. Voice and Swallowing Difficulties in Parkinsonian-type Multiple System Atrophy

Sebastian Doeltgen and Jane Bickford

 

Chapter 50. Lower Cranial Nerve Palsy

Maggie Kuhn

 

Chapter 51. Vagal Injury Following Ruptured Carotid Pseudoaneurysm

Anna Miles and Jacqueline Allen

 

Chapter 52. Dysphagia Following Head and Neck Cancer

Wendy Liu, Peter Loizou, and Faruque Riffat

 

Chapter 53. Neurologically Impaired Pharynx

Lacey Adkins, Melda Kunduk, and Andrew J. McWhorter

Chapter 54. Cricopharyngeal Dysfuncation

Ashli O’Rourke

 

Chapter 55. Systemic Sclerosis/CREST Syndrome and Swallow Dysfunction

Silvia G. Marinone-Lares and Jacqueline Allen

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