5 results match your criteria: "Hospital USP Marbella[Affiliation]"

Safeness, subjective and objective changes after turbinate surgery in pediatric patients: A systematic review.

Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol

August 2020

Young-Otolaryngologists of the International Federations of Oto-rhino-laryngological Societies (YO-IFOS) Rhinology Study Group, Spain; Department of Otolaryngology, University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain.

Objective: Inferior turbinates are the main structure related to impaired nasal breathing. When medical treatment fails, surgery is the next step, according to clinical guidelines. However, despite the widespread acceptance of this procedure, there is some controversy about performing it in children.

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Objectives: The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness and morbidity of the combined use of bipolar radiofrequency uvulopalatoplasty and a sclerosing agent applied to the soft palate in patients with snoring and apnea during a 1-year follow-up period.

Methods: This was a prospective, nonrandomized study. Twenty-eight patients with primary snoring due to palatal flutter who fulfilled the inclusion criteria were enrolled.

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The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy and morbidity in the use of the palatal implant technique (PITs) in patients with failed uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP) after a 6-month follow-up period. This was a prospective, nonrandomized study. Sixteen patients who underwent UPPP by the same Institution with Fujita's technique with initial success but developed posterior residual apnea or snoring who fulfilled the inclusion criteria were enrolled.

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Keloids: A viral hypothesis.

Med Hypotheses

April 2008

Plastic Surgery Unit, Hospital USP Marbella, Avda. Severo Ochoa, 22, Marbella, Málaga, Spain.

The triggering cause of keloid formation on a healing wound remains an enigma. In fact, the hypotheses put forward so far to explain this phenomenon seem inconsistent with some clinical features of the disease. The recently established bonds between infectious agents and some pathologies of unknown origin such as peptic ulcer disease, Kaposi's sarcoma or cervical cancer among others led us to consider a potential infectious origin for keloids.

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Background: Inferior turbinate hypertrophy is one of the most common causes of nasal airway obstruction in children. Medical treatment often produces very little improvement. Radiofrequency therapy has recently been shown to be safe and effective in volumetric tissue reduction of the turbinates in adults, but no report has been published about its use in children.

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