We describe 3 cases of metachronous hypopharyngeal cancer developing after laryngeal cancer had been treated with both radiotherapy and total laryngectomy. All 3 patients were men, 2 were 89 years old, and 1 was 65 years old. All patients had undergone total laryngectomy and radiotherapy for cancer for the glottis more than 20 years earlier.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNihon Jibiinkoka Gakkai Kaiho
October 2010
Myasthenia gravis is often difficult to diagnose and treat in older subjects due to complications, previous history and reciprocal interaction with drugs used to treat complications. An 84-year-old woman with slowly progressive 2-year dysphagia and dysarthria had reached critical condition with aspiration pneumonia. She was diagnosed with thymoma-free myasthenia gravis and her respirator removed after being administrated an anticholinesterase drug.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNihon Jibiinkoka Gakkai Kaiho
November 2006
Recently, patients receiving the long-term administration of typical antipsychotics have been recognized to be at risk of developing intractable tardive dystonia. A 44-year-old man was referred to our hospital because of progressive dysphagia for about 5 years. He had received several typical antipsychotic medications since at age of 24 years for the treatment of chronic schizophrenia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study identified that physiologically the superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle at the level of the base of the tongue contributes to retrusive movement of the tongue with constriction of the mid-pharyngeal cavity and possesses unique properties in terms of motor speech control along with the genioglossus muscle. From a kinematic study involving trans-nasal fiberscopy and lateral X-ray fluorography, retrusive movement of the tongue was highly correlated with constrictive movement of the mid-pharyngeal cavity. An electromyographic study revealed that the superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle at the level of the base of the tongue contributes to retrusive movement of the tongue and that the genioglossus muscle contributes to protrusive movement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDislocation of the arytenoid cartilage occurs following medical instrumentation involving the laryngeal cavity or laryngeal injury from outside the larynx. We reported a case of spontaneously posterior dislocation of the arytenoid cartilage. A 53 year-old man suffering from suddenly recurring aphonia and its improvement many over 3 months without laryngeal injury or inducement eventually ceased to improve.
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