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Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery Faculty Papers

2009

Bronchoscopy

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Multimodality Education For Airway Endoscopy Skill Development., Ellen S. Deutsch, Thomas Christenson, Joseph Curry, Jobayer Hossain, Karen Zur, Ian Jacobs Feb 2009

Multimodality Education For Airway Endoscopy Skill Development., Ellen S. Deutsch, Thomas Christenson, Joseph Curry, Jobayer Hossain, Karen Zur, Ian Jacobs

Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery Faculty Papers

OBJECTIVES: Airway endoscopy is a difficult skill to master. A unique practicum was designed to help otolaryngology residents develop endoscopy skills. The learning modalities included lectures, an animal laboratory, high-fidelity manikins, virtual bronchoscopy simulation, and standardized patients. This study compares the relative subjective value of these learning modalities for skill development and realism. METHODS: Participants used a Likert scale (1=disagree to 5=agree) and open responses to anonymously rate the efficacy of 5 learning modalities for teaching airway management, endoscopy skills, and clinical leadership and for providing a realistic experience. RESULTS: The results in 2007 were uniformly positive, with mean scores …


Unusual Fibrosclerotic Lesion Of The Laryngotracheal Complex Presenting As Subglottic Stenosis., Douglas R. Johnston, Joseph M. Curry, Raphael Rubin, Marc R. Rosen Jan 2009

Unusual Fibrosclerotic Lesion Of The Laryngotracheal Complex Presenting As Subglottic Stenosis., Douglas R. Johnston, Joseph M. Curry, Raphael Rubin, Marc R. Rosen

Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery Faculty Papers

We present a case report that describes the pathology, presentation, and management complexities of an unusual, destructive fibrosclerotic lesion of the laryngotracheal complex. An otherwise healthy 21-year-old man presented with a 1-year history of progressive shortness of breath and stridor. The initial examination revealed a 3-cm, grade III subglottic stenosis. Nodular fibrosis of the strap muscles, laryngotracheal cartilages, and trachea was evident. Biopsies revealed dense peritracheal desmoplastic reaction with focal erosion of cartilage. However, features diagnostic for relapsing polychondritis, desmoid tumor, or orbital pseudotumor were absent. The disease progressed to involve severe stenosis and thickening of the trachea and main …