Nippon Jibiinkoka Gakkai Kaiho
Online ISSN : 1883-0854
Print ISSN : 0030-6622
ISSN-L : 0030-6622
Volume 104, Issue 7
Displaying 1-5 of 5 articles from this issue
  • Kiminori Sato
    2001Volume 104Issue 7 Pages 715-720
    Published: July 20, 2001
    Released on J-STAGE: October 22, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A Clinicopathological investigation of 34 patients with surgery-requiring odontogenic maxillary sinusitis was conducted. 1) Eighty-nine percent of the causative teeth leading to odontogenic maxillary sinusitis were teeth that had received a root canal treatment. The root canals of most of these teeth were incompletely filled with the filling material. 2) The pathological findings for the causative teeth showed pulpal necrosis and apical lesions after the root canal treatment. 3) Apical lesions in incorrectly treated teeth caused ostitis and odontogenic maxillary sinusitis. 4) The cause of odontogenic maxillary sinusitis should be questioned, even if a dental procedure has been performed. 5) All cases of sinusitis treated with endoscopic sinus surgery improved remarkably. Endoscopic sinus surgery is highly indicated for odontogenic maxillary sinusitis. 6) If the ventilation and drainage of the maxillary sinus is successful after surgery, most of the causative teeth (root canal-treated teeth with apical lesions) can be preserved only by treatment with antibiotics.
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  • Michiya Matsumura, Eiji Chida, Satoshi Suto, Satoshi Fukuda, Masaaki K ...
    2001Volume 104Issue 7 Pages 721-727
    Published: July 20, 2001
    Released on J-STAGE: October 22, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The purpose of this study was to investigate the ability of the OAE screener GSI 70 to evaluate of cochlea function in neonates, infants and adults. Distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) were measured using the GSI 70 DPOAE Analyzer and evaluated in 123 human ears between December 1999 and June 2000. We performed the following four general clinical tests to determine the reliability of the GSI 70: 1) comparison of DPOAE levels measured using the ILO 92 and the GSI 70 in 55 adult ears, 2) comparison of DPOAE levels measured using the GSI 70 and hearing levels in 55 adult ears, 3) comparison of DPOAE levels measured using the GSI 70 and ABR levels in 45 neonate and infant ears, and 4) evaluation of the utility of DPOAE measurements obtained using the GSI 70 in functional deafness cases. The following results were obtained: 1) DPOAE levels measured with the ILO 92 and the GSI 70 were closely correlated (correlation coefficient, 0.773 at 2 kHz and 0.813 at 4 kHz). 2) The sensitivity of the GSI 70 in adult ears confirmed to have normal hearing was 80% at 2 kHz and 100% at 4 kHz; the specificity of hearing-impaired ears was 94% at 2 kHz and 94% at 4 kHz. 3) The sensitivity of the GSI 70 in normal neonate and infant ears with normal hearing was 100% at 2 kHz and 100% at 4 kHz; the specificity of hearing-impaired neonate and infant ears was 97% at 2 kHz and 94% at 4 kHz. 4) All of the functionally deaf ears showed excellent DPOAE responses. Examinations using the GSI 70 DPOAE analyzer were very easy and fast. Also, the results were highly reliable, with the exception of one adult who was classified as having normal hearing in an out-of-scale hearing level at 2 kHz. We suggest that specific criteria be established for the clinical usage of the GSI 70 in performing objective hearing evaluations.
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  • Tadashi Kitahara, Noriaki Takeda, Kazumasa Kondoh, Tetsuo Morihana, Sh ...
    2001Volume 104Issue 7 Pages 728-734
    Published: July 20, 2001
    Released on J-STAGE: October 22, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Endolymphatic sac surgery is one of the most widely accepted techniques used to treat intractable Meniere's disease. To improve this surgery, we developed the following techniques: A simple mastoidectomy was used to expose the endolymphatic sac between the sigmoid sinus and inferior margin of the posterior semicircular canal. The sac was opened and filled with a mass of prednisolone. A bundle of absorbable gelatin films was then inserted into the sac lumen to expand it, followed by gelatin sponges dipped in a high concentration of dexamethasone. Long-term results (17-32 months) in 20 patients with intractable Meniere's disease treated with endolymphatic sac drainage and steroid-insertion surgery (EDSS) showed that definitive spells were completely controlled in 15 of 20 cases (75%); all reports of vertigo decreased; hearing improved in 12 of 20 cases (60%); and annoyance due to tinnitus decreased in 15 of 20 cases (75%). Steroids directly instilled into the endolymphatic cavity may thus be more effective with the diseased inner ear organs than those applied via any other route. Drainaging of endolymphatic fluid at the sac into the mastoid cavity also contributed to these satisfactory EDSS results.
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  • Minoru Ikeda, Hidehisa Nakazato, Yuzuru Abiko, Mutsumi Sugiura, Kanako ...
    2001Volume 104Issue 7 Pages 735-743
    Published: July 20, 2001
    Released on J-STAGE: October 22, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The Yanagihara method and the House-Brackmann (H-B) method are widely used in Japan to evaluate facial paralysis. The present study focuses on the relationship between the evaluation of facial paralysis using these methods and self-evaluation by patients. One-hundred and thirty-one patients with facial paralysis were included in the study, consisting of 68 males and 63 females between the ages of 17 and 84 years (mean age: 41±18 years). In addition to the Yanagihara and H-B methods, two methods of self-evaluation were used by the patients. In the first self-evaluation method, the patient was asked to rate the degree of paralysis as a grade of one to six. In the second method, the patient was asked to rate the severity of the paralysis on a scale of 0-100. The paralysis scores and grades determined using the Yanagihara and H-B methods were correlated with the self-evaluations. However, the strength of the correlation varied among the patients, indicating that the evaluation of subjective symptoms differed among individuals. Even patients who were evaluated as either “completely paralyzed” or “cured”according to the Yanagihara and H-B methods did not always rate their subjective symptoms as being consistent with these scores. In particular, 20 to 30% of patients who were evaluated as “cured”complained of minor dyskinesia.
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  • [in Japanese]
    2001Volume 104Issue 7 Pages 744-747
    Published: July 20, 2001
    Released on J-STAGE: October 22, 2010
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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