Facial gender-affirming surgery (FGAS), one of many transition-related surgeries (TRSs), "feminizes" the faces of transgender and gender diverse (TGD) patients undergoing transition. However, it is difficult to demonstrate the medical necessity of FGAS in terms of postoperative quality of life (QoL) outcomes due to a lack of standardized assessment tools. Thus, FGAS remains largely unsubsidized in North America.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Facial gender-affirming surgery (FGAS) is described as a set of surgical procedures done to feminize the soft tissue and the facial skeleton, allowing for transfeminine individuals to be recognizable as women to others. It is established in the literature that the most significant facial area for determination of gender is the forehead (Spiegel in Laryngoscope 121:250-261, 2011). This article describes the author's three main surgical techniques used in forehead feminization and reports on the results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Phalloplasties are one of the most performed genital surgeries in the treatment of gender dysphoria for transmasculine patients. Urethral lengthening is an essential component of phalloplasties. Few techniques have been described for the creation of this pars fixa urethra.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep loss has detrimental effects on cognitive and emotional functioning. These impairments have been associated with alterations in EEG measures of power spectrum and event-related potentials, however the impact of sleep loss on inter trial phase coherence (ITPC), a measure of phase consistency over experimental trials, remains mostly unknown. ITPC is thought to reflect the ability of the neural response to temporally synchronize with relevant events, thus optimizing information processing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVolitional neural modulation using neurofeedback has been indicated as a potential treatment for chronic conditions that involve peripheral and central neural dysregulation. Here we utilized neurofeedback in patients suffering from Fibromyalgia - a chronic pain syndrome that involves sleep disturbance and emotion dysregulation. These ancillary symptoms, which have an amplificating effect on pain, are known to be mediated by heightened limbic activity.
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