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Friday, 30 September 2011

Cat with Two Faces (Literally)

Posted on 05:53 by Unknown
Frank and Louie are an extremely rare type of cat known as a Janus cat. Born with two faces, he (they) are the longest living Janus cat in existence.

Watch video here.


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Posted in cat, faces, feline, frank, heads, janus, louie, two | No comments

Cigarettes Contain Radioactive Polonium

Posted on 04:15 by Unknown
Cigarettes are known to cause cancer...

But we now know there's another reason why... they contain radioactive material, specifically polonium-210!

Tobacco companies also have known about it since 1959. As reported in ABC, historical documents reveal tobacco companies not only knew about the radioactive substance, but studied it, then refused to do anything about it!

They figured out that:

1) It caused "cancerous growths" in the lungs of smokers,
2) Calculated how much radiation a regular smoker would ingest over 20 years

Then they kept the research secret. The level of deception is breath-taking.

The radiation alone from cigarettes can account for up to 138 deaths for every 1,000 smokers over period of 25 years.

Even more disturbing, is that ALL tobacco products on the market today still contain radioactive polonium. This is in spite of washing techniques available since 1980 to remove the radioactivity but refused by tobacco companies to perform whether due to cost or the fact that washing would remove the addictive nicotine component as well.

Take home message?

STOP smoking! It's killing you through not only harmful chemicals, but also radioactivity!

Read the ABC article here.

Reference:
Cigarette Smoke Radioactivity and Lung Cancer Risk. Nicotine Tob Res (2011) doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntr145
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Posted in cancer, cigarette, company, lung, mouth, polonium, radioactive, radioactivity, tobacco | No comments

Not All Spinning Motions Cause Dizziness

Posted on 03:52 by Unknown
In one of the stranger research projects I've encountered in awhile, French scientists reported on why in the sport of discus throwing, athletes tend to feel more dizzy than those who hammer throw.

Whether discus or hammer throwing, both require spinning on part of the athlete before letting the discus/hammer go for long distances.

59% report dizziness with discus throwing, but none with hammer throwing. Why?

This occurred even among athletes who did both sports eliminating individual susceptibilities to dizziness.

Based on slow-motion video analysis, it was conjectured that visual bearings can be used more easily with hammer throwing than during discus throwing. Moreover, less foot contact with the ground for ground-body tactile feedback and generation of head movements liable to induce motion sickness from acceleration were felt to be contributing factors.

How do these findings translate to patients who are dizzy?

1) Visual bearings - Fixate on objects that you know to be still
2) Increase body-ground contact - Wear flat shoes instead of stiletto heels as well as cane/walker use
3) Minimize sudden turning head motions - Turn with the body rather than the head, or turn the head slowly

Of note, this research project won the 2011 Ig Nobel Prize for Physics.

Reference:
Dizziness in discus throwers is related to motion sickness generated while spinning. Acta Otolaryngol. 120 (3), 390-5.
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Posted in cause, discus, dizziness, dizzy, hammer, ig, nobel, rotating, spinning, throwing, turning | No comments

Tuesday, 27 September 2011

HIPAA Allows for Regular Email Communication Between Patients and Physicians

Posted on 13:48 by Unknown
There is a widespread mistaken belief that HIPAA prohibits physicians from communicating with patients using regular un-encrypted email as well as with other physicians about patient care.

HIPAA, for those who don't know, is a law that requires patient information to be kept private with safeguards. Email (such as yahoo, gmail, aol, etc) is not considered a secure form of communication.

However, HIPAA does allow for such un-secured email communication under certain circumstances. I quote from the horse's mouth:
"Patients may initiate communications with a provider using e-mail. If this situation occurs, the health care provider can assume (unless the patient has explicitly stated otherwise) that e-mail communications are acceptable to the individual. If the provider feels the patient may not be aware of the possible risks of using unencrypted e-mail, or has concerns about potential liability, the provider can alert the patient of those risks, and let the patient decide whether to continue e-mail communications."
As such, it may be worthwhile for a patient to acknowledge the following statements before an email can be sent from a practice website using un-secured email:
"I understand email is not considered secure and as such, is not considered a confidential method of communication."  
"By your sending an email to us, you are giving permission for us to reply by email."
Even if private health information may be included, that's fine if, I quote from the horse's mouth:
"Further, while the Privacy Rule does not prohibit the use of unencrypted e-mail for treatment-related communications between health care providers and patients, other safeguards should be applied to reasonably protect privacy, such as limiting the amount or type of information disclosed through the unencrypted e-mail."
Read more about un-secured email communication as it relates to HIPAA here from the Department of Health & Human Services.
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Posted in allowed, communication, electronic, email, encrypted, hipaa, law, patient, Physician, secure, security | No comments

MRI Scans CAN Cause Vertigo

Posted on 04:14 by Unknown
Researchers at Johns Hopkins published a study that reports that MRI scans CAN cause feelings of dizziness induced by magnetic fields causing motion of the electrically charged fluid of the inner ear.

In both ears, there is a "gyroscope" called the labyrinth. Whenever the head turns or a force like gravity is exerted on this system, fluid moves within which tells the brain that motion has occurred. It's much like looking into a glass of water and based on the way the water tilts in the glass, you can guess which way motion is occurring.

In any case, the study took two groups of people, one with an intact labyrinth system and another without a functioning labyrinth system. Only those individuals with an intact labyrinth system suffered vertigo while getting an MRI. Furthermore, the stronger the MRI's magnetic field, the worse the vertigo.

Beyond the "that's interesting" trivia, these results are VERY important in any type of brain activity research. Why? Well, if a person is feeling dizzy, the brain activity you may be studying using the MRI may be attributable to the dizziness itself and the patient's coping mechanisms to deal with it rather than whatever brain activity research you may be investigating.

On a more science-fiction note, based on these findings, an MRI can theoretically be used to potentially diagnose and treat dizziness due to the inner ear. After all, if it can cause dizziness, it certainly can be used to help it as well!

Reference:
MRI Magnetic Field Stimulates Rotational Sensors of the Brain. Current Biology, 22 September 2011. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2011.08.029
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Posted in ct, dizziness, dizzy, inner ear, mri, radiology, scan, vertigo | No comments

Sunday, 25 September 2011

Oral Exam Using a Finger

Posted on 12:38 by Unknown
For a good physical exam, physicians use their senses (eyes, ears, nose) to detect disease processes that may not necessarily be obvious to a lay person. Beyond these obvious senses, fingers and hands are also utilized to feel for unusual bumps or masses that may not be obvious to the naked eye.

Take a neck mass for example. Neck masses may not be necessarily visible, but by feeling the neck, may become obvious. To use an analogy, a bowling ball under a mattress may not necessarily be obvious, but if you lay on the bed, would become painfully obvious.

Physicians also use the hands/fingers to examine areas that may not be visible... such as the unpleasant digital rectal exam (inserting a finger up a bung-hole) which is done to detect blood in the stool, rectal/anal cancers, anal muscular incompetence, etc.

However, I find it odd that the mouth is a body area that is not often "felt" around... physicians included.

A finger can appreciate unusual mouth pathology that may not necessarily be appreciated by looking alone. Furthermore, just like the rectal exam, a finger can appreciate base of tongue pathology that cannot be visualized by having a patient go "ah".

I truly feel that actor Michael Douglas would have been diagnosed with his base of tongue cancer much earlier if only a doctor stuck a finger and swept that back area of the tongue. One can "feel" cancer as it is rock hard and very tender. True... it may cause a person to gag, but for a cancer test, it's dirt cheap, fast, and reliable.

However, it does not just have to be areas of the mouth that can not be seen. Even for those ulcerations and bumps of the mouth that one can clearly visualize (or not), it does help to touch it. Is it hard? Soft? Ulcerated? Tender? Grooved? Papillated? Fungating? Rubber-like? Blottable?

Each characteristic provides information to achieve a more accurate diagnosis.

To an ENT way of thinking, if a doctor regularly performs a digital rectal exam, than one can certainly do the same thing at the other end. It's less invasive and provides just as much information.

Say "ah"!!!
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Posted in bump, cancer, exam, finger, lesion, mouth, oral, test, testing, tongue, ulcer | No comments

Saturday, 24 September 2011

United Kingdom Ends $17 Billion Electronic Medical Records Initiative

Posted on 09:35 by Unknown
The Wall Street Journal on Sept 23, 2011 reported that the United Kingdom will scrap the entire electronic medical records (EMR) initiative that has been 9 years in the making with nearly 6.4 billion pounds already spent.

That action was hinted at back in August 2011 after a scathing parliamentary report stating the initiative to be wasteful and incapable of delivery.

I'm not surprised...

It's hard enough to get a group of doctors in one hospital to agree with a treatment plan let alone agree to a medical records system. The problem is exponentially more difficult when applying it to an entire country.

Physicians practice medicine differently... just like teachers have their own unique way of teaching kids. A method that may work for one doctor or teacher will not work for another. Even the method may change depending on how "busy" things are (teacher with a class of 5 kids versus 30 kids) so a doctor in a busy inner-city emergency room will have different flows and needs from an electronic medical records than a rural family practice with a sedate pace. Furthermore, the needs of a dermatologist is very different from a pediatrician. One can't expect a single EMR system to meet the needs of both perfectly just like one cannot expect a math teacher to use the same teaching methods as a singing teacher.

Forcing physicians to use a single standard electronic medical records without adapting to these realities is bound to fail no matter how much time, training, software, and hardware you throw at it.

A better alternative (my opinion), is to treat electronic medical records like the computers they reside on. There should be many different types of EMR systems just like there are MANY different types of computer models, speeds, makes, cost, sizes, etc.

However, unlike current EMR systems, in spite of who makes a computer and what operating system software it runs, it has standardized components... USB, Firewire, HDMI, VGA, BlueTooth, etc. as well as a universal communication medium called the "internet" that works with phones, computers, laptops, etc regardless of who makes it and what software it is on.

You would think that an EMR system given its digital essence would be able to easily communicate with other systems... but no... they don't communicate at all... which is why paper reports still exist... which are than scanned into the EMR.

Rather than the government (whether the United Kingdom or the United States) dictating what physicians must do and mandating EMR initiatives, I believe the money would be much better spent on mandating inter-operability and communication standards. The free market will create the best EMR systems and physicians will pick the one that best meets their need.

The other more insidious side of EMR is the over-reaching health goal mandates which means well, but runs into the same problem of applying standards to all physicians. Take "meaningful use" set by the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). One of the core measures of meaningful use is adult weight-screening and follow-up.

Now as an ENT specialist, I see patients specifically for earwax. Why in the world would I want to perform a weight-screening when all I want to do (and what the patient only wants me to do) is get earwax out???

Makes no sense.

Does it to you???

Reference:
U.K. Scrapping National Health IT Network. InformationWeek Healthcare. Aug 4, 2011
U.K. Ends Health-Service IT Upgrade. Wall Street Journal. Sept 23, 2011
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Posted in adoption, cms, doctor, ehr, electronic, emr, health, meaningful use, medicaid, medical, medicare, nhs, Physician, records, united kingdom | No comments

Thursday, 22 September 2011

New Webpage on Vocal Cord Granuloma

Posted on 06:37 by Unknown
Given the sudden interest patients have expressed in vocal cord granulomas ever since singer John Mayer announced a hiatus in concerts due to his voicebox granuloma, a new webpage has been developed to describe this unusual mass as well as treatment options.

Read all about it here!
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Posted in benign, granuloma, laryngeal, larynx, mass, procedure, surgery, treatment, vocal cord, vocal process, voicebox | No comments

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

Singer John Mayer Diagnosed with Vocal Cord Granuloma

Posted on 03:20 by Unknown
On Sept 19, 2011, media reported that singer John Mayer has been forced to cancel all upcoming concert plans and delay release of a new album due to a voicebox growth.

This growth was described as a "granuloma."

What exactly is a granuloma?

It is a benign mass commonly due to repetitive mild vocal trauma resulting in exuberant growth of a specific region of the voicebox lining.

To be more precise, rather than the vocal cord itself, granulomas are most commonly found on the vocal process which is the "hinge" that allows for vocal cord movement. It is located in the back area of the voicebox.

An imprecise analogy of what a granuloma is would be a keloid of the skin.

Symptoms include mild (if any) hoarseness, mild intermittent pain on the side of the voicebox where the granuloma is located with talking/singing, rarely coughing up blood, and if large, shortness of breath.

Just like keloids of the skin, surgical removal alone is almost certainly going to fail with recurrence of the granuloma within weeks to months. All repetitive trauma to the area must be addressed to minimize risk of recurrence which is why restricted voice use must be pursued for several months (no loud talking/singing, talking ONLY when you must). Voice therapy helps to "teach" a person how to talk when they talk without causing further injury to the area. As such, botox injection to the vocal cord has been found helpful to semi-paralyze the vocal cords from coming together (chemically induced vocal cord paralysis). Reflux medications are necessary even if a patient has no symptoms as ANY acid exposure to the area is just as bad a trauma due to yelling.

Steroid injections are helpful to minimize the underlying exuberant inflammatory reaction that leads to granuloma recurrence and may need to be performed several times for effect.

To summarize, the steps followed when a granuloma-like mass is discovered on exam is as follows:

1) Trial restricted voice use and reflux medications. Voice therapy also strongly recommended.
2) If no improvement after a period of time, surgical excision to ensure it truly is a granuloma and not cancer or some other pathology
3) Follow-up with steroid injections to the granuloma site. Watch video below.
4) Botox injection can be considered which chemically prevents complete vocal cord adduction preventing the repetitive trauma to the granuloma site.

Read a Rolling Stone report here.

Read more about voicebox granulomas.

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Posted in gerd, granuloma, john mayer, lpr, process, reflux, steroid, surgery, treatment, vocal cord, voicebox | No comments

Sunday, 18 September 2011

Tongue Acrobatics

Posted on 07:40 by Unknown
Impressive tongue acrobatics... Not much more to say! Watch the video here.

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Posted in acrobatics, tongue, video | No comments

World's Longest Human Tongue

Posted on 07:32 by Unknown

The longest human tongue ever recorded is that of Stephen Taylor and measures 9.8 centimetres (3.86 in). Apparently, his tongue has not stopped growing even though he is a grown adult.

The longest tongue for a female is that of Los Angeles resident Chanel Tapper whose tongue measures 3.8 inches! Her tongue is also quite acrobatic as shown in this YouTube video.


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Posted in guinness, longest, tongue, worlds | No comments

Another Rock Singer With Injured Voice

Posted on 04:53 by Unknown
On Sept 16, 2011, the Stone Temple Pilots had to cancel their tour because their lead singer Scott Weiland was placed on voice rest due to damaged vocal cords at risk for permanent damage. Specifically, the doctors at University of Cincinnati Voice Health Center determined that he had scarring on his left vocal cord and a tremendously inflamed right vocal cord.

The left vocal cord scarring is likely from past vocal trauma that did not heal properly and is now permanently damaged whereas the right vocal cord is at risk of also becoming permanently damaged if not aggressively managed. The picture shown here is an example with inflammation involving both vocal cords. Compare this with the picture below which shows one normal vocal cord and one inflamed vocal cord.


Without further information, beyond voice rest to allow the vocal cord inflammation to resolve without further injury, treatment may also include steroids as well as reflux medication.

It seems to be a continuing trend for singers of all genres to be pushed to the point where their vocal cords get injured resulting in show cancellations and at worst, become a one-hit wonder.

Other singers THIS YEAR alone who have cancelled tours due to voice injury include Kings of Leon, Duran Duran, Adele, The Vaccines, etc

And it's not just rockers, but also opera singers.

If you are a singer and you don't have a voice coach and supportive management, you need to remedy this immediately or you risk having a career that's a one-hit wonder.
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Posted in cancel, concert, cord, damage, injured, laryngitis, rock, scar, show, singer, tour, vocal, voice | No comments

Saturday, 17 September 2011

World Record Large Ears

Posted on 03:57 by Unknown
On September 2011, the Guinness Book of World Records announced the longest ears of any dog belongs to a Coonhound named Harbor. His magnificent ears measured 12.25 inches and 13.5 inches long (left and right respectively).

I wonder how much earwax he produces!
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Posted in book, dog, ears, guinness, largest, record, world | No comments

Saturday, 10 September 2011

Keychain Emergency Airway Device (Video)

Posted on 16:11 by Unknown
Health professionals who know how to perform cricothyroidotomy to obtain an emergency airway in someone who is obstructing can appreciate a nifty keychain device called LifeStat.

LifeStat can be carried around and immediately utilized to perform emergency cricothyroidotomy in any setting.

Watch a video here to see how it works.

It can be purchase from Shippert Medical for $145 here.

Reference:
Utilization of the LifeStat emergency airway device. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol. 2008 Jan;117(1):1-4.


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Posted in airstat, airway, cric, cricothyroidotomy, death, emergency, lifestat, stat, trach, tracheostomy | No comments

Friday, 9 September 2011

Smoker's Kids Have More Ear Infections

Posted on 03:02 by Unknown
Although not entirely new news... a new review paper which collated the results of 61 past studies has reaffirmed that smoking around kids increases their risk of ear infections dramatically.

Just how much?

Kids living with a smoker had a:

  • 37 percent higher risk of ear infections and hearing problems
  • 62 percent higher risk of ear problems if the household smoker was their mom
  • 86 percent more likely to undergo ear surgery than kids without secondhand smoke exposure

Read a MSNBC story on this here.

So don't smoke for your own health as well as your kids' health!!!

Reference:
Parental Smoking and the Risk of Middle Ear Disease in Children. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. Published online September 5, 2011. doi:10.1001/archpediatrics.2011.158
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Posted in cigarette, dad, ear, ear tubes, health, infections, mom, parents, secondhand, smoke, smoking, surgery | No comments

Thursday, 8 September 2011

100 Years of Style and Dance

Posted on 08:25 by Unknown
A random post for those who appreciate dance and fashion...

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Posted in clothing, dance, fashion, random, video | No comments

Carbon Dioxide Helps with Nasal Allergies

Posted on 04:20 by Unknown
MSNBC reported recently that a shot of carbon dioxide gas into the nose can help with allergies based on preliminary findings funded by Capnia, a company that makes the product.

Upside:
Symptoms of nasal allergies improved within 30 minutes.
No liquid is involved... just carbon dioxide gas.

Downside:
Lasts only 4 hours
80% has nasal discomfort after use
25% became teary eyed
14-20% developed headaches

My take?
I'll pass on this drug... There are already good drugs with minimal side effects that lasts up to 24 hours already on the market .

Read the story here.

Of note, some readers may point out that there is an older study that had better results. With two one-minute carbon dioxide treatments into the nose resulted in symptom relief within 10 minutes and lasted for 24 hours. Even with these results, I'll still pass... not sure how many people will go with 2 one-minute treatments when a 1 second swallow with an allergy pill or nasal spray use works just as good.

Reference:
Nasal carbon dioxide for the symptomatic treatment of perennial allergic rhinitis. Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology - 19 August 2011 (10.1016/j.anai.2011.07.014)

Intranasal noninhaled carbon dioxide for the symptomatic relief treatment of seasonal allergic rhinitis. J Allergy Clin Immunol. Volume 121, Issue 1, Pages 105-109 (January 2008).
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Posted in allergy, carbon dioxide, co2, congestion, nasal, perennial, research, seasonal, treatment | No comments

Wednesday, 7 September 2011

Intranasal Treatment for Clogged Ears

Posted on 14:23 by Unknown
A common cause of clogged ears with inability to pop them easily is due to eustachian tube dysfunction. There are a number of ways to address this annoying problem, but one of the first steps to try is intranasal medications whether in nasal spray form or nasal drop form.

The whole idea behind intranasal treatment is the fact that the ears are connected to the back of the nose via a tunnel called the eustachian tube. Watch video explanation.


Normally, when the ears are popped (also known as valsalva), the individual is opening up the eustachian tube to allow pressure and/or fluid in the ears to drain/escape out into the back of the nose. That's why when you blow your nose, you often hear a popping noise in the ears. Read more about how/why this happens here.

Patients suffering from eustachian tube dysfunction are unable to get the tunnel to open up. In this scenario, the pressure or fluid remains trapped in the ear. It's a plumbing problem in its essence.

Given the problem is the eustachian tube, intranasal medications are used to try and open up the tunnel and make it easier for the individual to pop the ears open.

Trick is... how to get the intranasal medications to where the eustachian tube is located in the very back of the nose.

There are a few ways to accomplish this... some which work better than others.

Method 1:
Use a nasal spray medication and aim the bottle to the back of the neck while keeping the head down (looking at the floor). The spray bottle MUST be perpendicular to the face. Why? Take a look at the diagram below:


If you aim the bottle towards the eye or top of the head, the medication is hitting areas of the nose where the sinus cavities are... not where the eustachian tube is located.

You have to look down and point the nasal spray bottle up towards the ceiling because all nasal spray medications use a straw that requires vertical orientation (same reason why when you drink Pepsi from a cup, the cup is upright).



Anatomically, the nasal spray "shoots" the medication straight up to where the eustachian tube is located.
Method 2:
Use an eye dropper and place a drop of the medication into the nose and have it "drain" to where the eustachian tube is located. Practically, this means filling a prescription of the nasal spray medication, opening up the bottle, and pouring the contents into an eye dropper.

This method requires positioning the head such that gravity will ensure proper movement of the medication to where the eustachian tube is located.

There are two ways to achieve this. This first way is the "Head-Tipped-Back Position".

In this position, the nasal drop will "fall" down to where the eustachian tube is located:
Mygind's Position is the alternative position which accomplishes the same thing, but the person is laying down looking up. For some people, this position is more comfortable than bending the head back.

Studies have shown that Method 2 (nasal drops) works better than Method 1 (nasal spray). However based on my personal experience in my patient population, Method 2 is not as well tolerated as Method 1. People often feel like drowning or suffocating when performing this maneuver (mini water-boarding so to speak). Also, it seems to be more irritating to the mucosal lining of the nose and throat.

And as we all know, if it is not comfortable or user-friendly, patients will not do it.

As such, I usually recommend Method 1 (nasal spray) which works "good enough". For patients who are ambitious and are willing, go with Method 2 (nasal drop).

Reference:
Techniques of Intranasal Steroid Use. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 130(1):5-24.
Intranasal delivery of drugs to eustachian tube orifice. The Journal of Laryngology & Otology (2011), 125: 934-939

Images taken from Techniques of Intranasal Steroid Use and Wikipedia.
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Posted in clogged ears, dysfunction, ears, ETD, eustachian, feel, full, pressure, treatment, tube | No comments

Monday, 5 September 2011

Best Ballpoint Pen for Emergency Cricothyroidotomy?

Posted on 18:24 by Unknown
I recently blogged about a man who choked to death on an airplane and the impossibility of saving this man's life with a surgical airway like a cricothyroidotomy without a sharp object around inside the plane (ie, knife or scalpel).

I also stated that "Some surgeons would argue a strong, stiff ball-point pen could have been used to perform the cricothyroidotomy, but as someone who has performed a dozen emergency cricothyroidotomies and tracheotomies in the past, even under the best of circumstances with a knife and being on a hospital floor with help around, it is hard. Furthermore, skin and the windpipe is made of tough 'fabric' and trying to punch a ball-point pen through is laughable. Try doing it yourself on a chicken with the skin on."

Well... it got me thinking... Let's assume for argument's sake that it IS possible to perform a cricothyroidotomy by literally punching through with a stiff ball-point pen into the airway. Would it actually work???

Believe it or not, there are two studies (listed below) I was able to find that tried to answer that very question. Contrary to popular belief... even IF a ball-point pen is able to secure an airway, the majority were found to be unsuitable due to inadequate internal diameter with too high an airway resistance for breathing.

In fact, the only TWO pens that might work (from a breathing standpoint) are the:

Baron retractable ballpoint
BIC soft feel Jumbo

I can't even find these items on Amazon.com.

A sports bottle straw apparently works better than a pen.

Reference:
Bystander cricothyroidotomy performed with an improvised airway. Mil Med. 2002 Jan;167(1):76-8.

Airflow efficacy of ballpoint pen tubes: a consideration for use in bystander cricothyrotomy. Emerg Med J. 2010 Apr;27(4):317-20.

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Posted in airway, ball, ballpoint, cric, cricothyroidotomy, emergency, pen, procedure, trach, tracheostomy | No comments

Beating Heart in a Box

Posted on 17:09 by Unknown
With heart and lung transplants, the current standard is to transport the heart (or any other organ to be transplanted) inside an icebox cooler on ice. It's the same kind of icebox cooler you would use to take on a picnic. Think about it... You can buy a human organ transportation container off of Amazon.com for $39. In fact, I would not be surprised if some medical centers purchased such icebox coolers from Amazon.com.

Well, a company called TransMedics is aiming to elevate organ transportation technology from the icebox cooler to a cyborg-like container where the heart is warm, alive, and still-beating from donor to recipient. Same goes for the lung. Others soon to follow!

Check out these videos!




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Posted in alive, beating, cooler, heart, icebox, lung, organ, transmedics, transplant, transportation, warm | No comments

The Healthcare Dilemma Simplified

Posted on 15:42 by Unknown
As an otolaryngologist in private practice, I have observed from the sidelines the healthcare crisis that is brewing in our nation, being debated in Congress, and bemoaned by fellow colleagues.

Being a simple man, I see the essence of the healthcare problem being summarized in one sentence:

"How to deliver low-cost, high-quality healthcare cheaply."

Being a simple man, I also realize that this statement is nearly impossible to accomplish for something as complex as healthcare delivery.

It's also a concept engineers have struggled with for way longer than medicine has. It is summarized by a great graphic known as the "Engineering Project Triangle". What is achievable is only where the colors overlap.




Design something quickly and to a high standard, but then it will not be cheap. 

Design something quickly and cheaply, but it will not be of high quality.

Design something with high quality and cheaply, but it will take a long time.

In other words, you can only pick two.

In terms of healthcare, the triangle could be known as the "Healthcare Project Triangle."



Design healthcare that is able to provide quality care at low-cost, than not everyone can have it. It's also known as "rationed" care which is what Canada and Great Britain have to some degree.

Design healthcare that is able to provide quality care to everybody, it will be expensive. This is where our healthcare model is currently situated.

Design healthcare this is able to provide low-cost care to everybody, it will suffer in terms of quality. Some would argue this is the HMO model. It's also what we could consider the kind of healthcare that is provided in free clinics.

In essence, you can't have healthcare with all three characteristics. You can only pick two.

Engineers know that and are probably wondering why doesn't everybody else.

"You can only pick two" is what the great debate is all about. Nobody can decide on which two and there are FANTASTIC arguments for the given two a Senator or presidential candidate will promote.

However, in the end, either quality, quantity, or low cost will suffer no matter which healthcare policy is chosen.

So the great debate has been identified...

The great question is what will be sacrificed?

Because unfortunately, there is no great answer.

Reference:
When Nurses Wear "Do Not Disturb" Signs. Dr. Wes.
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Posted in debate, healthcare, pick, policy, problem, triangle, two | No comments

Man Chokes to Death During Air Flight... Preventable?

Posted on 14:40 by Unknown
Image courtesy of digitalart / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
News media reported on Sept 5, 2011 about Robert Rippingale who choked to death during a flight from Singapore to New Zealand. He was with his girlfriend who noted he was shaking and turning blue after eating an in-flight meal. A doctor and two nurses attempted to save him though unsuccessfully.

The article reports that CPR was performed to try and save the man, but the obvious question is whether a Heimlich maneuver was done. Obviously, as long as an obstruction is present, doing CPR is bound to fail.

Assuming a Heimlich maneuver was performed and failed to remove the airway obstruction... what could have been done to save this man's life?

Let's assume best case scenario of having an experienced ENT surgeon was on board.

The surgeon could try to relieve the obstruction manually by looking down the throat using a laryngoscope and using instruments to remove the food obstruction from the airway.

If that fails, an emergency cricothyroidotomy would have saved this man's life. This emergency life-saving procedure is in essence making a hole in the neck directly into the airway. It is slightly different from a tracheostomy in terms of where anatomically this hole is made, but the end-result is the same.

Question is, EVEN if you had an experienced ENT on board, would an airplane even have a laryngoscope as well as instruments to remove a food impaction? Would an emergency cricothyroidotomy even be possible due to prohibition of sharp objects in airplanes? After all, you still need a knife of some sort to make the incision and to dissect down to the airway. Without a sharp instrument, this step would be impossible even if you have someone who knows what to do.

According to Appendix A to Part 121 of Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations (14 CFR 121), the specific requirements for US carriers regarding first aid and emergency aid kits are as follows:

For 0-50 seats, one kit is required; 51-150 seats, two kits are required; 151-250 seats require three; and more than 250 seats require 4 kits.

These kits must include, at a minimum:
  • 16 Adhesive bandage compresses, 1-inch
  • 20 Antiseptic swabs
  • 10 Ammonia inhalants
  • 8 Bandage compresses, 4-inch
  • 5 Triangular bandage compresses, 40-inch
  • 1 Arm splint, noninflatable
  • 1 Leg splint, noninflatable
  • 4 Roller bandage, 4-inch
  • 2 Adhesive tape, 1-inch standard roll
  • 1 Bandage scissors
Also, at least one approved medical kit must be on board that includes at a minimum:
  • 1 Sphygmonanometer
  • 1 Stethoscope
  • 3 Airways, oropharyngeal (3 sizes): 1 pediatric, 1 small adult, 1 large adult or equivalent.
  • Self-inflating manual resuscitation device with 3 masks (1 pediatric, 1 small adult, 1 large adult or equivalent).
  • CPR mask (3 sizes), 1 pediatric, 1 small adult, 1 large adult, or equivalent.
  • 1 IV Admin Set: Tubing w/ 2 Y connectors
  • 2 Alcohol sponges
  • 1 Adhesive tape, 1-inch standard roll adhesive.
  • 1 pair Tape scissors
  • 1 Tourniquet
  • 1 Saline solution, 500 cc
  • 1 pair Protective nonpermeable gloves or equivalent
  • 6 Needles (2-18 ga., 2-20 ga., 2-22 ga., or sizes necessary to administer required medications).
  • 4 Syringes (1-5 cc, 2-10 cc, or sizes necessary to administer required medications).
  • 4 Analgesic, non-narcotic, tablets, 325 mg
  • 4 Antihistamine tablets, 25 mg
  • 2 Antihistamine injectable, 50 mg, (single dose ampule or equivalent).
  • 2 Atropine, 0.5 mg, 5 cc (single dose ampule or equivalent).
  • 4 Aspirin tablets, 325 mg
  • 1 Bronchodilator, inhaled (metered dose inhaler or equivalent).
  • 1 Dextrose, 50%/50 cc injectable, (single dose ampule or equivalent).
  • 2 Epinephrine 1:1000, 1 cc, injectable, (single dose ampule or equivalent).
  • 2 Epinephrine 1:10,000, 2 cc, injectable, (single dose ampule or equivalent).
  • 2 Lidocaine, 5 cc, 20 mg/ml, injectable (single dose ampule or equivalent).
  • 10 Nitroglycerin tablets, 0.4 mg
  • 1 Basic instructions for use of the drugs in the kit.
It seems that there are airways of different sizes available, but no laryngoscope or other instruments to remove airway foreign objects.

Nowhere is a scalpel or knife listed either. You have needles and syringes which theoretically can be used to "poke" into the airway. However, though an 18 gauge needle might work for a chipmunk's airway, it is not sufficient for a full-grown man. It would be like breathing through a straw, but 50 times smaller and even more difficult to breath thru.

So it appears that in the event of an airway obstruction during an air-flight for which Heimlich fails, you can have the world's best surgeon present, and the man still would have died.

Some surgeons would argue a strong, stiff ball-point pen could have been used to perform the cricothyroidotomy, but as someone who has performed a dozen emergency cricothyroidotomies and tracheotomies in the past, even under the best of circumstances with a knife and being on a hospital floor with help around, it is hard. Furthermore, skin and the windpipe is made of tough "fabric" and trying to punch a ball-point pen through is laughable. Try doing it yourself on a chicken with the skin on.

Read the news article here.
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Posted in airflight, airplane, airway, choking, death, died, emergency, first aid, obstruction | No comments

Saturday, 3 September 2011

Best Medication for Dizziness

Posted on 18:10 by Unknown
So how would one go about figuring out the best medication for dizziness due to motion-sickness leading to nausea and even vomiting?

Well, step 1... Put a bunch of people in a machine and figure out the necessary motions that will cause dizziness.

Step 2... Do the same thing, but this time, put people on different medications and figure out what works the best.

Sound crazy?

Well it has been done by the friendly folks at NASA. Why would they perform such unpleasant experiments? It's for the fighter pilots and astronauts who may encounter motion sickness where dizziness may mean the difference between life and death and have no alternative other than medications.

So what medication did they find works the best?

Through trial and error, they have found that a combination of oral scopolamine (not the patch), to suppress vomiting, and dextroamphetamine, to counteract scopolamine's potential to induce drowsiness, reduced the incidence of motion sickness from 70 percent to about 12 percent among passengers in the "Vomit Comet"—a DC-9 aircraft used to achieve brief periods of zero gravity as part of NASA's Reduced Gravity Program.

They have also found that conditioning (repeating movements that induce dizziness) over and over again does result in the development of tolerance to a motion environment in 95% of individuals.

Read more about this here.
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Posted in best, dizziness, drug, medication, motion, patch, scopolamine, sickness, treatment | No comments

Surgery Without Wires

Posted on 03:58 by Unknown
Surgery is messy... and I don't mean in terms of blood and guts...

What I mean are wires, cables, tubing, etc.

Let's take a routine tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy for example...

  1. Electric cord for the operating table
  2. Electric cord for the anesthesia machine
  3. Electric cord for the surgeon's headlight
  4. Light cord from the surgeon's headlight to the lightbox
  5. Breathing circuit tube from the patient to the anesthesia machine
  6. Carbon dioxide outflow tube from the patient to the anesthesia machine
  7. Suction tubing from the surgical table to the vacuum canister
  8. Vacuum cable from the vacuum canister to the wall socket
  9. Electrocautery cable (along with electric cord to power the machine)
  10. Coblation cable (along with electric cord to power the machine)
  11. IV fluids lines from patient to IV bags
  12. EKG lines
  13. Grounding pad cable
  14. All the wires and cables that go with running a computer
  15. etc etc etc
It's an "organized" chaos of cords, tubes, electric wires, etc all emanating away from the patient like a Man-of-Wars jellyfish.

Pictures shown on the internet as well as movies are "staged" and appear to be neat and orderly, but believe me (as someone who has had pictures taken), surgeons and nurses take the time to "tidy" things up before the picture or video is recorded giving a false impression of neatness.

99% of the time, everyone knows where everything is, so it's not a problem. However, when an unanticipated emergency happens, things get confusing and in fact dangerous to not only the patient, but the staff (I recall one incidence of a nurse running to get a surgical tray, tripping on one of the numerous cords mentioned above, falling, and breaking her hand).

When something stops working... we literally have to trace the cord from source to origin to figure out why something stopped working. With all the cords present, this tracing needs to be done by hand and eye (analogous to an entertainment system with all the wires in the back, one would trace out the cords by hand and eye).

IS there a better way???

Of course the operating room staff takes the time to bundle and organize the various cords, but the fact remains that the cords are there.

What about wireless technology to power instruments or relay information?

Well, NPR reported on August 23, a young 22 year-old entrepreneur Meredith Perry, who has invented and patented a way to transmit power over the air without the need for wires using ultrasound. Yup... the same ultrasound used to look at a human fetus in the womb.

Her ingenious idea is to use ultrasound to "vibrate" the air which than vibrates a piezoelectric transducer contained within nearby devices. The vibration of the piezoelectric transducer will than generate an electric current which can be stored in a battery and used to power anything that requires energy.

I acknowledge that it may take time before such wireless power is available to power large surgical devices, but one can always hope!

Read the NPR story here.

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Posted in air, npr, over, piezoelectric, power, surgery, ultrasound, wire, wireless, without | No comments

Friday, 2 September 2011

Movie Sets are Dangerous to Ears!

Posted on 04:56 by Unknown
First it was Maggie Q, and now I learn that there are other celebrities with hearing loss due to movie set loud noise exposure.

Leonard Nimoy (Spock of Star Trek fame) suffers from right ear tinnitus due to hearing damage from a special effects explosion during filming of Star Trek episode "Arena".

Similarly, Steve Martin suffers from tinnitus due to hearing damage sustained during filming of a pistol-shooting scene for "¡Three Amigos!" in 1986.

Here is a full list of celebrities with hearing problems.
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Posted in actor, actress, celebrity, effects, exposure, hearing loss, loud, movie, noise, set, special, tinnitus | No comments

Thursday, 1 September 2011

Hearing Loss Can Can Accelerate Brain Volume Loss

Posted on 16:03 by Unknown
Everyone has heard of the saying "If you don't use it, you will lose it."

Well, when it comes to hearing loss, that seems to apply to not just hearing per se, but the actual structure of the brain!

Researchers studied MRI scans of older individuals (ages 60-77) with hearing loss, they found less brain volume in the auditory cortex of the brain which is not entirely surprising. What was surprising was that there was less brain activity on functional MRI scans when these individuals listened to complex sentences (it is just not "hearing" that is lost, but higher level brain function of "comprehension" being lost too).

These results suggest that hearing loss can lead to a systematic decrease in neural activity of speech comprehension and may also contribute to loss of brain volume especially in the primary auditory cortex.

This finding also implies that by wearing hearing aids, such loss can be prevented.

The next step would be to do the same research on patients WITH known hearing loss, but hearing aids have been used. What would be also interesting would be to see if such brain changes can be reversed if hearing aids are used after such brain loss is seen on MRI.

Reference:
Hearing Loss in Older Adults Affects Neural Systems Supporting Speech Comprehension. The Journal of Neuroscience, 31 August 2011, 31(35): 12638-12643; doi: 10.1523/​JNEUROSCI.2559-11.2011
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Posted in auditory, brain, cortex, decrease, hearing, loss, volume | No comments

Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Poor Quality Sleep Contributes to High Blood Pressure

Posted on 18:29 by Unknown
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is known to cause all sorts of health problems beyond sleepiness. Medical problems include increased risk of stroke, heart attack, peripheral vascular disease, high blood pressure, etc. However, what researchers have recently found is that even if you do not have obstructive sleep apnea, if a person does not have enough "deep sleep" per night resulting in poor quality sleep, that also can increase risk of hypertension.

Researchers collected data on 784 men over the age of 65 who didn't have high blood pressure initially and followed them over the next 3 years. At home sleep studies were obtained initially and at follow-up to look at their sleep patterns as well as their blood pressure.

What they found was that individuals with poor quality sleep, reflected by reduced slow wave sleep (deep sleep), puts individuals at significantly increased risk of developing high blood pressure, and that this effect appeared to be independent of obstructive sleep apnea.

Read a CNN report here.

Reference:
Decreased Slow Wave Sleep Increases Risk of Developing Hypertension in Elderly Men. HYPERTENSION AHA.111.174409. Published online before print August 29, 2011,

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Posted in air quality, apnea, blood pressure, deep, high, hypertension, obstructive, osa, poor, sleep | No comments

Nasonex Sinus Implant for Chronic Sinusitis

Posted on 07:38 by Unknown
The FDA on August 15, 2011 approved of a novel dissolvable sinus implant that slowly releases mometasone furoate steroid (same active ingredient as Nasonex steroid nasal spray) directly onto the sinus mucosa.

The spring-like implant is placed at the time of sinus surgery and automatically expands and conforms to the sinus cavity regardless of size and shape.

The theory is that by continuously delivering a low dose steroid directly to the sinus cavity, sinus inflammation will decrease and risk of scarring will decrease resulting in an overall decrease in chronic sinusitis for the patient after sinus surgery.

This is a GREAT idea and studies have born out its effectiveness. Hopefully other drug-eluting dissolvable stents like this will be developed in the future!

Developed by Intersect ENT, the implant is called "Propel."

Read about the FDA approval here.

References:
Safety and efficacy of a novel bioabsorbable, steroid eluting sinus stent. INTERNATIONAL FORUM OF ALLERGY & RHINOLOGY. 2011;1(1):23-32.

Advances in the Surgical Management of Chronic Sinusitis and Nasal Polyps. CURRENT ALLERGY AND ASTHMA REPORTS. Published online 08 February 2011

Controlled steroid delivery via bioabsorbable stent: Safety and performance in a rabbit model. AMERICAL JOURNAL OF RHINOLOGY & ALLERGY. November–December 2009, Vol. 23, No. 6.

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Posted in dissolvable, endoscopic, ess, implant, nasonex, propel, sinus surgery, sinusitis, surgery | No comments

Monday, 29 August 2011

Gluing Cut Blood Vessels Together

Posted on 03:06 by Unknown
Gluing blood vessels together, just like gluing a cut garden hose together, does not seem like a great idea at first, but Stanford researchers just might have figured out how to do this safely and effectively.

Over the past century and still currently used today is to hand-sew the cut ends of the blood vessel together using stitches. This method of reattaching blood vessels is time-consuming and tedious, especially when the blood vessels are tiny.

In this new glue method which is FIVE times faster, a special substance is injected into the cut blood vessel on both ends called a poloxamer. This substance has the unique property of becoming an elastic solid when heated above body temperature which than turns into a biodegradable liquid that dissolves away when cooled.

In a nutshell, the steps are as follows:

  1. The poloxamer is inserted into the blood vessel where is solidifies using a halogen lamp thereby keeping the lumen open.
  2. The cut edges of the blood vessel are precisely reapproximated and "glued" together using dermabond, a substance currently used to "glue" together cut skin.
  3. The blood vessel is allowed to cool down by taking away the halogen lamp and the poloxamer contained within the blood vessel melts and dissolves away.

So far, this procedure has only been done in animals, but since all of the components of this technique has already been FDA-approved for human use for other purposes, if proven to work, can rapidly be adopted for microvascular surgery in humans.

Reference:
Vascular anastomosis using controlled phase transitions in poloxamer gels. Nature Medicine (2011) doi:10.1038/nm.2424
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Posted in blood, cut, glue, vascular, vessel | No comments

Saturday, 27 August 2011

Actress Maggie Q Suffers From Hearing Loss

Posted on 16:13 by Unknown
American actress Maggie Q of Mission: Impossible III and TV show Nikita fame suffers from significant hearing loss due to a loud noise exposure from a movie set explosion.

Apparently, during shooting of an explosive stunt, her left eardrum was blown out while her right ear suffered mild hearing loss.

Such an injury could have been prevented with hearing protection.
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Posted in explosion, hearing loss, maggie q, noise | No comments

Friday, 26 August 2011

Jay Leno Has a Degree in Speech Therapy

Posted on 03:02 by Unknown
Image by Lee Stranahan from Wikipedia
Yes... It is true!!!

Jay Leno admired by many for his comic personality had his beginnings as a speech therapist. He graduated in 1973 from Emerson College with a bachelor's degree in speech therapy. In order to help pay for his education, he worked in comedy clubs as well as an emcee in talent shows.

Who knew?

Reference:
Wikipedia
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Posted in jay leno, speech, therapy, voice | No comments

Earthquake Helps Man Regain Hearing... Perhaps Not!

Posted on 02:54 by Unknown
Fox News reported on Aug 25, 2011 about Robert Valderzak who suffered conductive hearing loss for a few months... until the earthquake shook him and the rest of the East Coast after which he was able to hear.

Though this may sound miraculous, conductive hearing loss is one of those reversible type of hearing loss. It is not permanent. Example of conductive hearing loss include:

• Earwax
• Fluid in the ears
• Ear infection
• Eustachian tube dysfunction
• Problems with the middle ear bones

All these problems can be "fixed" and the hearing loss reversed. Permanent hearing loss is due to nerve damage and a reversal of a nerve type of hearing loss could be considered "miraculous."

Now how could an earthquake conceivably reverse a conductive hearing loss? Without benefit of having examined Mr. Valderzak, perhaps he had a lot of earwax and the quake "shook" the earwax out or free (kind of like when a person goes swimming and gets some water in the ear that requires head-shaking to get it out).

It could also be coincidence. There are thousands of people who suffer conductive hearing loss every day for one reason or other. Often, this type of conductive hearing loss will spontaneously resolve one day after days or weeks or even months go by even if not aggressively treated medically. That's why in kids who have fluid in the ears (which causes conductive hearing loss), we sometimes wait 3 months before we put ear tubes in. Quite a number resolve on their own spontaneously.

Now if there are thousands of people with conductive hearing loss and we expect a few to spontaneously recover their hearing each day... and the earthquake was felt by millions throughout the East Coast... I'm surprised that this particular patient is the only one who regained his hearing after the earthquake. I suspect there's at least a dozen that probably regained their hearing that day that the media has not heard/reported about... as well as the day before and the day after. I also suspect that there's probably a few hundred that "lost" their hearing during the earthquake due to earwax, fluid buildup in the ears, ear infection, etc.

Read the Fox New article here.
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Posted in conductive, earthquake, hearing loss, how, permanent, treatment | No comments

Sunday, 21 August 2011

Shape of Human Nose Influenced by Climate

Posted on 10:39 by Unknown
The basic function of the human nose is to warm and humidify the air before it reaches the lungs. Because of the wide variation of human habitats from the polar cold and dry air to the equatorial hot and humid weather, one would expect the nose to accommodate to these climate extremes accordingly thru evolutionary pressures.

In essence, logically one would expect the nose to change shape to enhance time that air is in contact with the warm and moist nasal interior in cold and dry climates compared to the opposite environmental extreme.

German scientists evaluated this hypothesis thru 3D modeling of 100 skulls to analyze the shape of the bony nasal cavity of 10 modern human groups living in five different climates and found that the bony nasal cavity appears mostly associated with temperature effects and the nasopharynx with humidity.

Humans living in cold, dry climates tended to have nasal cavities relatively high and long with an abrupt narrowing in the upper nasal cavity than those living in hot, humid climates. Such characteristics enhance contact between the air and the nasal mucosal tissue that helps to warm and humidify that air.

What does such a nose look from the outside? A narrow, longer internal nasal cavity is generally linked to a relatively narrower and more projected nose.

Read a magazine article about this research.

Reference:
Climate-related variation of the human nasal cavity. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Volume 145, Issue 4, pages 599–614, August 2011
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Posted in climate, dry, evolution, human, humidity, nose, shape, temperature | No comments

Saturday, 20 August 2011

Illustrated Guide to a PhD (and Perhaps MDs Too!)

Posted on 18:35 by Unknown
Original work "The Illustrated Guide to a PhD" by Dr. Matt Might. Though geared towards a PhD, this guide can apply to MDs as well.

Imagine a circle that contains all of human knowledge:

By the time you finish elementary school, you know a little:

By the time you finish high school, you know a bit more:

With a bachelor's degree, you gain a specialty:

A master's degree deepens that specialty:

Reading research papers takes you to the edge of human knowledge:

Once you're at the boundary, you focus:

You push at the boundary for a few years:

Until one day, the boundary gives way:

And, that dent you've made is called a Ph.D.:

Of course, the world looks different to you now:

But, don't forget the bigger picture:


Keep pushing.
Read More
Posted in cartoon, illustrated guide, md, phd | No comments
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  • earthquake
  • earwax
  • earworm
  • eating
  • eczema
  • education
  • effect
  • effects
  • egg
  • ehr
  • elderly
  • electrocautery
  • electrolysis
  • electron
  • electronic
  • email
  • emergency
  • emergent
  • emission
  • emr
  • encrypted
  • endoscope
  • endoscopic
  • endoscopic sinus surgery
  • endoscopic staple diverticulostomy
  • endoscopy
  • endotracheal
  • england
  • english
  • enlargement
  • ent
  • environmentally
  • epiglottis
  • epiglottitis
  • epipen
  • epistaxis
  • er
  • erectile dysfunction
  • error
  • esd
  • esophageal cancer
  • esophageal function testing
  • esophagus
  • ess
  • estrogen
  • ETD
  • eustachian
  • eustachian tube
  • evidence
  • evolution
  • exam
  • examination
  • excision
  • exercise
  • exercise induced asthma
  • expendables
  • experience
  • explosion
  • exposure
  • eye
  • eyelid
  • face
  • facebook
  • faces
  • facial
  • facial fracture
  • fade
  • failling
  • failure
  • faint
  • fainting
  • farm
  • fashion
  • fauquier
  • fauquier health
  • fauquier hearing
  • fauquier hospital
  • fda
  • feedback
  • feel
  • fees
  • fel d1
  • feline
  • female
  • fess
  • fiberoptic
  • figure
  • film
  • filter
  • financial
  • find
  • fine
  • finger
  • fire
  • first aid
  • first branchial
  • fish
  • fixation
  • florida
  • floxin
  • flu
  • flu shot
  • fluid
  • fluid in ears
  • flush
  • follicle
  • food
  • food allergy
  • foreign
  • foreign body
  • format
  • forms
  • forum
  • fosamax
  • foul
  • frank
  • free
  • free clinic
  • full
  • full ears
  • fullness
  • functional
  • fungal
  • furniture
  • garbage
  • garbled
  • gardasil
  • gargle
  • gastritis
  • gaviscon
  • gavison
  • ge
  • Gene
  • General News
  • generic
  • genetic
  • genius
  • george washington
  • georgia
  • ger
  • gerd
  • germs
  • get
  • getzlaf
  • gifford
  • gland
  • glee
  • globus
  • glossopyrosis
  • glottic
  • glue
  • golden
  • golden nugget
  • google
  • gopro
  • gps
  • grade
  • grammy
  • granuloma
  • graphic
  • gross
  • groupon
  • grow
  • growth
  • gsk
  • guard
  • guideline
  • guiness
  • guinness
  • gum
  • gun
  • gunshot
  • H1N1
  • habit cough
  • habitual
  • hair
  • hairdresser
  • halitosis
  • halloween
  • hammer
  • hawaii
  • hbo
  • head
  • head dressing
  • headache
  • heads
  • health
  • health insurance
  • healthcare
  • healthy
  • healthy voice
  • healthymagination
  • hearing
  • hearing aid
  • hearing aids
  • hearing loss
  • hearing protection
  • heart
  • heart attack
  • heart disease
  • hedy
  • height
  • help
  • hematoma
  • hemorrhage
  • hepa
  • hibernating
  • hibernation
  • hiccup
  • hiccups
  • hidden
  • high
  • high quality
  • hipaa
  • hives
  • hoarse
  • hoarse voice
  • hoarseness
  • hockey
  • hollywood
  • home
  • homeless
  • honor
  • hormone
  • horn
  • Hospital
  • hotel
  • hour
  • hours
  • house
  • how
  • how to
  • how to stop
  • hpv
  • html5
  • huffington post
  • human
  • humidity
  • humming
  • humor
  • hyatt
  • hyperbaric oxygen
  • hyperfunctional
  • hyperreactive
  • hypertension
  • hypertrophy
  • hypoallergenic
  • hypopharyngocele
  • ibuprofen
  • icd
  • icd10
  • icd9
  • ice
  • ice cream
  • icebox
  • icu
  • ideal
  • idiopathic
  • ig
  • ig nobel
  • igf
  • illness
  • illusion
  • illustrated guide
  • image
  • image guided sinus surgery
  • imbalance
  • immune
  • immunization
  • immunotherapy
  • impedance
  • implant
  • in
  • In The News
  • inattention
  • incentive
  • incision
  • incison
  • income
  • infant
  • infection
  • infections
  • ingrid bock
  • inhaler
  • injection
  • injured
  • injury
  • inner ear
  • inova
  • insect
  • insecticide
  • instructor
  • instrument
  • insurance
  • integrity
  • intensive care unit
  • internet
  • intracapsular
  • intratympanic
  • intubation
  • invasive
  • iodide
  • iodine
  • ipad
  • iphone
  • ipod
  • irritable
  • isomer
  • issue
  • it
  • itching
  • itchy
  • jackson
  • jail
  • jairo
  • james kirkwood
  • janus
  • japan
  • jaw
  • jay leno
  • jericho
  • jewelry
  • jimmy kimmel
  • jogger
  • John Lewis
  • john mayer
  • jugular vein
  • kevinmd
  • kid
  • kids
  • kindle
  • king's speech
  • knife
  • knowledge
  • krulwich
  • la times
  • labor
  • lamarr
  • language
  • laptop
  • large
  • largest
  • lars
  • laryngeal
  • laryngeal dystonia
  • laryngeal sensory neuropathy
  • laryngitis
  • laryngologist
  • laryngology
  • laryngopharyngeal
  • laryngopharyngeal reflux
  • laryngospasm
  • larynx
  • laser
  • lauren
  • law
  • lawmaker
  • lawsuit
  • lawyer
  • laying
  • lazy ear
  • leak
  • Lecture
  • left
  • legislation
  • legislature
  • Lemierre's
  • lesion
  • life-cycle
  • lifestat
  • light
  • light-headed
  • lingual tonsils
  • lining
  • link
  • linkedin
  • lip
  • lips
  • liquid
  • live
  • lobster
  • local
  • location
  • long
  • longest
  • looxcie
  • loss
  • loss of smell
  • lost
  • lost voice
  • lotion
  • loud
  • loud music
  • loud noise
  • loud noises
  • louie
  • love
  • love in slow motion
  • lpr
  • luminol
  • lump
  • lung
  • lungs
  • mac
  • machine
  • magazine
  • maggie q
  • magnesium
  • mail
  • make
  • making
  • male
  • malignancy
  • man
  • management
  • manager
  • manometry
  • map
  • marker
  • marketing
  • mask
  • mass
  • mattress
  • maxillary
  • mayim
  • mcgovern nipple
  • mckellar
  • md
  • meaningful use
  • mechanism
  • media
  • medicaid
  • medical
  • medical mystery
  • medicamentosa
  • medicare
  • medication
  • medications
  • medicine
  • meditech
  • membrane
  • men
  • meniere's disease
  • metal
  • metallica
  • methylation
  • mgh
  • mice
  • michael douglas
  • micro
  • microbes
  • microscope
  • migraine
  • miley
  • mimic
  • mineral
  • minimally
  • minimally invasive
  • mirror
  • miscarriage
  • miscommunication
  • misdiagnosis
  • miss
  • missing
  • mission
  • mit
  • mobile
  • modified
  • mold
  • molding
  • mole
  • mom
  • money
  • monkey
  • morning breath
  • mortality
  • mosquito
  • motion
  • motrin
  • mouse
  • mouth
  • mouth breathing
  • movie
  • moving
  • mri
  • mrsa
  • msnbc
  • mtd
  • mucoid
  • mucus
  • mucus in throat
  • Multichannel Intraluminal Impedance
  • murder
  • muscle
  • muscle tension dysphonia
  • museum
  • music
  • musician
  • mutation
  • mutter
  • myobloc
  • myoclonus
  • mystery
  • mythbuster
  • nail
  • nar
  • narcotic
  • nasacort
  • nasal
  • nasal congestion
  • nasal crusting
  • nasal drainage
  • nasal hair
  • nasal obstruction
  • nasal polyps
  • nasal spray
  • nasonex
  • natalie
  • national security
  • ncis
  • ndm-1
  • nebulizer
  • neck
  • needle
  • negative
  • neonate
  • nerve
  • network
  • neuralgia
  • neurologic
  • neuropathy
  • neurorraphy
  • neurostimulator
  • New
  • new delhi
  • new england journal of medicine
  • new york times
  • newborn
  • news
  • nexium
  • nhs
  • nice
  • nickel
  • nickle
  • nicotine
  • night guard
  • nobel
  • nodule
  • noise
  • noisy breathing
  • non
  • non-acid
  • non-acidic
  • non-addictive
  • non-allergic
  • non-toxic
  • nonsedated
  • normal
  • northern virginia
  • nose
  • nose blowing
  • nosebleed
  • nosebleeds
  • nosejob
  • npr
  • nsaid
  • number
  • numbing
  • nurse
  • NYT
  • oae
  • obesity
  • observation
  • obstruction
  • obstructive
  • obstructive sleep apnea
  • obtain
  • odd
  • ode to joy
  • office
  • ointment
  • old
  • olympic
  • omeprazole
  • ondine's curse
  • online
  • opera
  • operating
  • operation
  • optical
  • optima
  • optimal
  • oral
  • oral appliance
  • oral sex
  • orchestra
  • organ
  • oropyrosis
  • orthopedic
  • orthopedics
  • osa
  • otalgia
  • otc
  • otoacoustic
  • otolaryngology
  • out
  • out-of-pocket
  • outer
  • over
  • over-the-counter
  • overweight
  • oyster
  • oz
  • pa
  • pacemaker
  • packing
  • pageant
  • pain
  • painful
  • paint
  • palate
  • pandas
  • paper
  • papilloma
  • parachute
  • paradoxical vocal cord
  • paralysis
  • paralyzed
  • parathyroid
  • parents
  • participating
  • past
  • patch
  • pathologist
  • pathology
  • patient
  • pattern
  • patulous
  • pbm
  • pediatric
  • pediatrician
  • pellet
  • pen
  • peptide
  • perennial
  • perfect
  • perforation
  • perfume
  • peri
  • perichondrium
  • period
  • peritonsillar
  • permanent
  • permission
  • persistent
  • personal
  • pet
  • ph
  • ph probe
  • pharmacist
  • pharmacy
  • pharyngeal
  • pharyngitis treatment
  • pharyngocele
  • pharynx
  • phd
  • phegm
  • phelgm
  • phelgmy throat
  • phlegm
  • phlegmy
  • phlegmy throat
  • phone
  • Physician
  • pick
  • picking
  • picture
  • pictures
  • piercing
  • piezoelectric
  • pillar
  • pipe
  • pitch
  • PKCzeta
  • placebo
  • plan
  • planet
  • planetree
  • plastic surgery
  • plastics
  • plugs
  • pocket
  • police
  • policy
  • pollen
  • polly hunsberger
  • polonium
  • polyp
  • pons
  • poor
  • popping
  • popular
  • popularity
  • portable
  • portman
  • positive
  • post
  • post-nasal
  • post-nasal drainage
  • posterior
  • pouch
  • power
  • ppo
  • practice
  • predicting
  • prediction
  • prednisone
  • pregnancy
  • pregnant
  • premarin
  • prenatal
  • prescribing
  • prescription
  • prescriptions
  • pressure
  • prick
  • prilosec
  • primer
  • problem
  • problems
  • procedure
  • process
  • professional
  • propel
  • protein kinase
  • provider
  • public
  • publication
  • puck
  • pulsatile
  • pumpkin
  • punishment
  • purchase
  • purulent
  • pus
  • puzzle
  • pylori
  • quickly
  • quickmark
  • r. kelly
  • radiation
  • radio
  • radioactive
  • radioactivity
  • radiological
  • radiology
  • raft
  • ragweed
  • random
  • rapid
  • raspy
  • RAST
  • reaction
  • reader
  • real-time
  • rebound
  • reckitt
  • record
  • recording
  • records
  • recurrent
  • red eyes
  • reduction
  • referral
  • reflux
  • regurgitation
  • rehm
  • removal
  • renovation
  • renovations
  • repair
  • repellant
  • replacement
  • reporter
  • research
  • residency
  • resident
  • resistance
  • response
  • resurface
  • resurfacing
  • review
  • rhinitis
  • rhinoplasty
  • richmond
  • right
  • ringing
  • rinse
  • risk
  • robert
  • robot
  • robotic
  • rock
  • roger
  • roof
  • room
  • rotating
  • routine
  • rubber
  • runny nose
  • rupture
  • ryan
  • safe
  • sale
  • saline
  • saliva
  • salivary stone
  • saltwater
  • santa claus
  • scan
  • scans
  • scar
  • scheduling
  • science
  • scientist
  • SCIT
  • scopolamine
  • scramble
  • scratch
  • screening
  • SD
  • seafood
  • search
  • seasonal
  • seaweed
  • secondhand
  • secure
  • security
  • sedated
  • sedation
  • self-pay
  • sensory
  • sepsis
  • septal
  • septo
  • septoplasty
  • septum
  • sermo
  • service
  • set
  • severe
  • sex
  • shampoo
  • shape
  • shark
  • shenandoah university
  • shop
  • shortness of breath
  • shot
  • shots
  • show
  • shrimp
  • sialadenitis
  • sialendoscopy
  • sialoadenitis
  • sickness
  • side
  • side effect
  • silent
  • silver nitrate
  • singer
  • singing
  • singing cat
  • singulair
  • singultus
  • sinuneb
  • sinuplasty
  • sinus
  • sinus fracture
  • sinus infection
  • sinus lift
  • sinus surgery
  • sinusitis
  • skating
  • skin
  • skin cancer
  • skull
  • sleep
  • sleep disorder
  • SLIT
  • sluder
  • small
  • smartphone
  • smell
  • smoke
  • smoking
  • sms
  • sneeze
  • sneezing
  • snore
  • snoring
  • snot
  • snotty nose
  • social
  • social media
  • social networking
  • soda
  • sodium
  • soft
  • song
  • sore
  • sore throat
  • sour
  • spa
  • spam
  • spanish
  • spasmodic
  • spasmodic dypshonia
  • spasmodic dysphonia
  • spasms
  • special
  • specialist
  • speech
  • speech therapy
  • spinal
  • spinning
  • spit
  • splints
  • split tube
  • spray
  • spur
  • ssnhl
  • staph
  • starvation
  • stat
  • station
  • stem
  • stereoisomer
  • sterile
  • steroid
  • steroids
  • sticky
  • stink
  • stone
  • stones
  • stops
  • storybooks
  • strange
  • strep
  • strep throat
  • stridor
  • strobe
  • stroboscopy
  • stroke
  • stuck
  • stud
  • student
  • study
  • stuffed animals
  • stuttering
  • sublingual
  • submandibular
  • submaxillary
  • sudden
  • sudden hearing loss
  • sun
  • sunblock
  • sunscreen
  • sunshine
  • superbill
  • superbowl
  • superbug
  • support
  • surgeon
  • surgery
  • surgical
  • survey
  • suture
  • swallow
  • swallowing
  • swelling
  • sword
  • symbicort
  • symphony
  • symptom
  • symptoms
  • syndrome
  • T-tube
  • tablet
  • talk
  • talking
  • tall
  • target
  • taste
  • tea
  • teacher
  • technology
  • teen
  • teenager
  • teeth
  • television
  • temperature
  • terrorism
  • terrorist
  • test
  • testing
  • tests
  • text messaging
  • the doctors
  • the onion
  • theory
  • therapy
  • thick
  • throat
  • throat cancer
  • throat clearing
  • throat-clearing
  • thrombosis
  • thrombus
  • throwing
  • thyroid
  • thyroidectomy
  • tia
  • tic
  • tic cough
  • tick
  • tilt
  • time
  • times
  • tinnitus
  • tiny
  • Tionne
  • TLC
  • TMJ
  • tobacco
  • TOCPM
  • today
  • tongue
  • tonsil
  • tonsil stones
  • tonsillectomy
  • tonsilliits
  • tonsillitis
  • tonsilloliths
  • tonsillotomy
  • tonsilolith
  • tonsiloliths
  • tony
  • tooth
  • tooth pain
  • top
  • topical
  • TORD
  • torres
  • tors
  • torticollis
  • tour
  • toxin
  • toyota
  • trach
  • tracheostomy
  • training
  • trans
  • translation
  • transmedics
  • transmission
  • transplant
  • transplantation
  • transportation
  • trauma
  • treating
  • treatment
  • tremor
  • trend
  • triangle
  • trombone
  • trouble
  • tube
  • tubes
  • tucci
  • tumor
  • turbinate coblation
  • turbinate hypertrophy
  • turbinate reduction
  • turning
  • tutorial
  • TV
  • tween
  • tweet
  • twitching
  • twitter
  • two
  • tylenol
  • tympanic
  • type
  • ulcer
  • ulpa
  • ulrich
  • ultrasound
  • unable
  • unclog
  • under
  • uninsured
  • united kingdom
  • university
  • Update
  • upper
  • upper respiratory infection
  • uppp
  • urgent
  • URI
  • urine
  • urticaria
  • usa
  • USA today
  • uva
  • uvula
  • uvulectomy
  • uvulopalatopharyngoplasty
  • vaccination
  • vaccine
  • vagal neuropathy
  • vascular
  • vasomotor
  • vasomotor rhinnitis
  • vcd
  • ventilation
  • versus
  • vertigo
  • ves
  • vessel
  • viagra
  • vibration
  • video
  • viral
  • virginia
  • virus
  • viruses
  • vit d
  • vitamin
  • vitamin A
  • vitamin d
  • vivosonic
  • vlog
  • vocal
  • vocal cord
  • vocal cord dysfunction
  • vocal cord paralysis
  • vocal cord paresis
  • vocal cords
  • vocal process
  • voice
  • voice therapy
  • voicebox
  • voicelift
  • volume
  • vomit
  • vs
  • wait
  • waiting
  • wall
  • wall street journal
  • warm
  • warrenton
  • washes
  • washington
  • washington dc
  • washington post
  • water
  • watkins
  • wax
  • wearable
  • web
  • web 2.0
  • webapp
  • Website
  • Website Update
  • wedge
  • weight gain
  • whale
  • what to do
  • wheezing
  • where
  • whisperer
  • whispering
  • white
  • who
  • whooping
  • wierd
  • wifi
  • will.i.am
  • wind
  • windows 7
  • winter
  • wire
  • wireless
  • withdrawal
  • without
  • woman
  • word
  • world
  • world voice day
  • world's
  • worlds
  • wound center
  • wp
  • wrestling
  • wrong
  • wsj
  • x-ray
  • xeomin
  • xray
  • xylitol
  • xyzal
  • youtube
  • zenker's
  • zenkers
  • zeta
  • zicam
  • zinc
  • zyrtec

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2011 (190)
    • ▼  September (26)
      • Cat with Two Faces (Literally)
      • Cigarettes Contain Radioactive Polonium
      • Not All Spinning Motions Cause Dizziness
      • HIPAA Allows for Regular Email Communication Betwe...
      • MRI Scans CAN Cause Vertigo
      • Oral Exam Using a Finger
      • United Kingdom Ends $17 Billion Electronic Medical...
      • New Webpage on Vocal Cord Granuloma
      • Singer John Mayer Diagnosed with Vocal Cord Granuloma
      • Tongue Acrobatics
      • World's Longest Human Tongue
      • Another Rock Singer With Injured Voice
      • World Record Large Ears
      • Keychain Emergency Airway Device (Video)
      • Smoker's Kids Have More Ear Infections
      • 100 Years of Style and Dance
      • Carbon Dioxide Helps with Nasal Allergies
      • Intranasal Treatment for Clogged Ears
      • Best Ballpoint Pen for Emergency Cricothyroidotomy?
      • Beating Heart in a Box
      • The Healthcare Dilemma Simplified
      • Man Chokes to Death During Air Flight... Preventable?
      • Best Medication for Dizziness
      • Surgery Without Wires
      • Movie Sets are Dangerous to Ears!
      • Hearing Loss Can Can Accelerate Brain Volume Loss
    • ►  August (22)
      • Poor Quality Sleep Contributes to High Blood Pressure
      • Nasonex Sinus Implant for Chronic Sinusitis
      • Gluing Cut Blood Vessels Together
      • Actress Maggie Q Suffers From Hearing Loss
      • Jay Leno Has a Degree in Speech Therapy
      • Earthquake Helps Man Regain Hearing... Perhaps Not!
      • Shape of Human Nose Influenced by Climate
      • Illustrated Guide to a PhD (and Perhaps MDs Too!)
    • ►  July (20)
    • ►  June (15)
    • ►  May (10)
    • ►  April (18)
    • ►  March (12)
    • ►  February (33)
    • ►  January (34)
  • ►  2010 (267)
    • ►  December (23)
    • ►  November (18)
    • ►  October (32)
    • ►  September (30)
    • ►  August (35)
    • ►  July (16)
    • ►  June (27)
    • ►  May (22)
    • ►  April (27)
    • ►  March (11)
    • ►  February (13)
    • ►  January (13)
  • ►  2009 (43)
    • ►  December (11)
    • ►  November (13)
    • ►  October (19)
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