Publications by authors named "Riepl R"

Article Synopsis
  • The study examines rare but significant complications associated with cochlear implantation, specifically focusing on subcutaneous emphysema in three patients.
  • Emphysema developed in these patients several months post-surgery, likely triggered by habits like nose blowing and CPAP therapy, with literature noting similar cases linked to Eustachian tube dysfunction and nasal issues.
  • Treatment typically involves conservative measures such as pressure bandaging, while surgical intervention is reserved for severe instances, underscoring the importance of preventive measures for at-risk patients.
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Article Synopsis
  • Complex surgeries often involve using autologous cartilage from places like the rib to reconstruct lesions in aural, nasal, and tracheal cartilage, but cartilage tissue engineering (CTE) offers a potential alternative.
  • Researchers utilized a custom glass bioreactor to improve cell migration into decellularized porcine cartilage scaffolds seeded with human nasal chondrocytes, finding that this dynamic culture significantly enhances cell migration compared to static methods.
  • While the bioreactor initially improved cell differentiation in the first 14 days, maintaining this differentiation over time remains a key challenge for advancing clinical applications in cartilage regeneration.
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Microvascular procedures require visual magnification of the surgical field, e.g. by a microscope.

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Article Synopsis
  • Robotic-assisted surgery (RAS) is common in many surgical fields like visceral surgery and urology, but it's rarely used in European otorhinolaryngology due to limitations in current robotic systems.
  • RAS faces challenges like high costs and the need for specialized instruments that suit the confined spaces of head and neck surgeries.
  • In regions like the UK and US, RAS is gaining traction for surgeries such as transoral procedures for oropharyngeal tumors, with studies showing potential applications in head and neck surgery.
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Background: Over the last decades conventional cochlear implant (CI) surgery has remained essentially unchanged. Nevertheless, alternative implantation techniques to further improve patient outcomes such as endaural implantation or robot-assisted surgery have been proposed in recent years. However, none of these have gained acceptance in clinical routine, thus confirming a demand for new developments.

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The epithelial cell-derived cytokine milieu has been discussed as a "master switch" in the development of allergic disease. To understand the role of innate immune response in nasal epithelial cells during allergic inflammation, we created and established a fast and minimally invasive method to isolate and culture human nasal epithelial cells from clinically and immunologically well characterized patients. Human nasal epithelial cells from non-atopic volunteers and from allergic rhinitis patients were compared in respect to their growth, barrier integrity, pattern recognition, receptor expression, and immune responses to allergens and an array of pathogen-associated molecular patterns and inflammasome activators.

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Dysphagia is a common symptom and can be indicative of a variety of heterogeneous diseases. "Classical" diseases of the head and neck region, such as acute tonsillitis, peritonsillar abscesses, diverticula, and benign or malignant tumors are common causes of dysphagia. However, it can also occur in the context of neurological diseases, e.

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Autologous cartilage as donor tissue for various surgical reconstructions such as nasal septum regeneration is limited and associated with donor site morbidity. Our goal was to evaluate a new resorbable chondroconductive biomaterial made of decellularized porcine nasal septum cartilage compared with autologous native auricular cartilage as the gold standard. In order to examine the material and determine its long-term outcome further, we used subcutaneous implantation and septal implantation in an orthotopic rabbit model.

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The implantation of autologous cartilage as the gold standard operative procedure for the reconstruction of cartilage defects in the head and neck region unfortunately implicates a variety of negative effects at the donor site. Tissue-engineered cartilage appears to be a promising alternative. However, due to the complex requirements, the optimal material is yet to be determined.

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Our experience of time is often subject to distortions. For instance, time appears to slow down when unexpected events occur. Previous research has shown that the duration of infrequent stimuli - so-called oddballs - is commonly overestimated, an effect referred to as the temporal oddball effect.

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Castleman's disease is a very rare and potentially severe lymphoproliferative disorder. First sign may be cervical lymphadenitis, requiring sufficient support in diagnosis and therapy by an ENT specialist. Based on a case series the current manuscript gives an overview of the symptoms, the course of disease and the therapy options.

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Background: Cardiorespiratory polysomnography (PSG) is considered the reference method for diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Due to waiting times and high costs, payers increasingly request outpatient polygraphy (PG) as an alternative to inpatient PSG. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of different outpatient PG devices compared to stationary PSG in clinical practice.

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The majority of women take at least one form of medication during pregnancy. Due to often discrepant information about the risk assessment of pharmaceuticals during pregnancy, physicians are often beset by uncertainty with respect to prescription and the fear of medicolegal consequences is high. As prospective clinical trials on drug safety during pregnancy are prohibited due to ethical reasons and animal studies are of limited applicability to humans, drug recommendations often only rely on observational data.

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Objectives/hypothesis: Septal deviation and hypertrophic inferior turbinates are a frequent cause of nasal breathing disorders. The goal of this study was to prove the effectiveness and safety of three current turbinoplasty techniques.

Study Design: This is a prospective, three-arm, single-blinded, single-center, randomized controlled trial.

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Objectives: Congenital choanal atresia is a complete obliteration of the posterior nasal aperture leading to life-threatening airway emergencies. Several surgical options including sublabial, transpalatal, transseptal or external approaches have been developed for the repair of choanal atresia. So far, no gold standard has been established, but transnasal endoscopic approaches have been favored by many surgeons in recent years.

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Objective: Despite a number of studies in the past decades, the role of Cholecystokinin (CCK) in anorexia nervosa (AN) has remained uncertain. In this study a highly specific assay for the biologically active part of CCK was used in patients with bulimic as well as with the restricting type of AN who were followed over the course of weight gain.

Methods: Ten patients with restricting and 13 with bulimic AN were investigated upon admission (T0), after a weight gain of at least 2 kg on two consecutive weighting dates (T1), and during the last week before discharge (T2) from inpatient treatment in a specialized clinic.

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Acute mountain sickness (AMS) is characterized by headache often accompanied by gastrointestinal complaints that vary from anorexia through nausea to vomiting. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of high altitude on plasma levels of gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) peptides and their association to AMS symptoms. Plasma levels of 6 GEP peptides were measured by radioimmunoassay in 11 subjects at 490 m (Munich, Germany) and, after rapid passive ascent to 3454 m (Jungfraujoch, Switzerland), over the course of three days.

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The aim of our study was to identify diurnal variation of perception of rectal distension and the release of gastroenteropancreatic hormones. In 12 healthy male volunteers (25 years, range 22-32), a rectal balloon distension was performed. Rectal perception thresholds (minimal, urge and pain) and rectal compliance were double-measured with a computer-controlled barostat at seven standardized time points during the day (from 16.

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Aims: Functions of the gut hormone cholecystokinin (CCK) include an important role in the regulation of gastric emptying, postprandial glucose homeostasis, and postmeal satiety. Postprandial CCK responses are significantly blunted in type 2 diabetic patients by unknown mechanisms. We hypothesized that hyperinsulinemia and lipid infusion influence circulating levels of biologically active CCK.

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Fasting and postprandial levels of human peptide YY (PYY) were recently found to be lower in obesity. To investigate whether PYY levels are correspondingly high in patients with anorexia nervosa, PYY concentrations were analyzed under basal conditions and in response to a liquid meal. We investigated PYY plasma levels in 16 female anorectic (BMI 15.

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This paper gives an overview of studies investigating endocrine changes in acute nausea and vomiting. The aetiology of nausea and vomiting is not fully understood, but it has been shown that different stress hormones are released into circulation during motion sickness. Studies with animals and humans have shown that acute nausea activates the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis and the neurohypophyseal system.

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