Showing posts with label ENT Specialists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ENT Specialists. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Epistaxis / Nosebleeds – What to do

Nosebleeds can happen when you least expect it. At the very least, they are alarming especially with small children, and at the worst, possibly life threatening. So what can you do about the bleeding nose and what action should you take after it has stopped bleeding?

The first thing is to stop the “stoppable” bleeding. Bleeding that comes from the front of the nose can be stopped by pressure. All other bleedings from the middle or back of the nose stops only by your own blood clotting or with medical attention. The first thing to do in a nose bleed is place your head forward, breathe through the mouth and press gently but firmly on the soft part of the nose. This is the lowest third of the nose that you can wiggle with your fingers. Placing your head forward means that you will be less likely to choke and swallow your blood, and any continuing bleeding is clear to see. Pressure should be applied for 15 minutes and this is usually more than enough to stop the small bleed, as our blood will effectively clot in less than 3 minutes. If you are on blood-thinning medication, this can take much longer.


After releasing the pressure, if there is no further active bleeding, this suggests that the bleeding is from the front of the nose. Dry weather and a long flight travel in a dry cabin may be the cause and applying some Vaseline ointment inside the nostrils will help. Seeking the early attention of your ENT Physician would be recommended so that a good check up can be done to prevent further bleeds and treating the underlying cause. You can usually expect that the nose will be clearly visualized with an endoscope of the front, middle and back of the nose. Sometimes a scan of the sinuses may be required as the cavities of the sinuses are not usually visible to the naked eye or endoscope. If a bleeding point is identified, it can be electro-cauterized and this is very successful in preventing future bleeding in 90% of cases. If a nasal allergy causing rhinitis exists, this is also easily treated with medication.


If the bleeding is especially heavy and/or does not stop, it is usually from the middle to the back of the nose. Here the reason is because the vessels are larger and we cannot physically press on them as they are situated inside the face. Situations such as this will require immediate attention at your nearest hospital as you may have lost a lot of blood. Your attending doctor’s priority would be to stop the bleeding first. This is usually undertaken with nasal packs placed into the nose. They are uncomfortable to put in but their intention is life saving. They may then possibly refer you to the ENT Physicians to identify with their special endoscopes where the bleeding is coming from, and treat you accordingly. Nowadays modern endoscopes for the body cavities have revolutionized epistaxis care. After identifying the bleeding point, if appropriate, the source maybe cauterized.




Nosebleeds are frightening for the sufferer as well as family and friends. Thankfully the majority of nosebleeds are minor and easily stopped by pressure as mentioned above. If the bleeding is unduly heavy and does not stop, urgent hospital attention should be sought.


]
Reference: www.entific.com.hk/
The information aims to provide educational purpose only. Anyone reading it should consult ENT Specialists before considering treatment and should not rely on the information above.

Monday, January 23, 2017

Voice Loss (Part Two)




In the first part of this article, we understand how our voice is produced, and in simple terms, how we lose our voice. Losing our voice is a problem for anyone as we are always communicating our wishes, dreams, love and needs to others.

So what can we do if we lose our voice? Firstly, we should not panic as common things happen commonly, and the commonest cause by far, is an acute viral laryngitis. The swelling from acute laryngitis is usually maximal at three days, after which the swelling subsides gradually, and the voice gradually returns to normal. During the inflamed phase, sufferers are best advised not to use their voice, as continuing voice use could damage and permanently scar the vocal cord lining. This scarring could result in a permanent hoarse voice by impairing the movement of the mucosal lining over the vocal ligaments.

Losing one’s voice is not unusual at all and most voices recover very quickly. If our voice doesn’t return to normal and you remain hoarse beyond three weeks, medical attention to make a diagnosis and to prevent long term irreversible damage would be recommended. Your ENT Surgeon can easily inspect your voice box by performing a flexible endoscopic examination of the larynx. So what conditions can cause chronic loss of voice that can be seen by endoscopy?

A growth on one or both vocal cords can prevent optimal closure of the cords. Excess air then leaks through the gap and voice production is impaired in terms of quality as well as intensity of the voice. Commonly the early formation of vocal cord nodules is the cause. Two non-cancerous thickening of the vocal cords on exactly opposite vocal cord surfaces prevent the cords from coming together well. With the leak, the voice is lost, and we try even harder to produce a voice by speaking louder. This means that the nodules can get bigger, and the hoarseness continues. Treatment here is primarily by speech therapy to re-educate the user how to use their voice better like a singer. If the nodules are too large and /or speech therapy has not worked, then phonosurgery to trim away the nodules may be necessary. If a growth is seen only on one vocal cord, then early surgery may be necessary to exclude cancer. Here the lesion is examined close up, excised and sent for testing. If it is cancerous, then follow up treatment protocols will be advised. However if the lesion looks like a cyst or a polyp under close up endoscopic examination during surgery, the lesion is removed with gentle and careful preservation of the vocal cord lining. This is called phonosurgery and requires great skill. The removal of the lesion is both diagnostic (as we sent the lesion for testing to know what it is) as well as also therapeutic (as the hoarse voice is treated as well)

A total loss of one’s voice is a catastrophe. This is unusual but it happens when one of the two vocal cords is paralysed. They are unable to meet in the midline, the gap is left wide open and therefore no turbulence or voice can be made. The cause here is damage to the nerve that moves the vocal cord. This nerve travels from our brain, down our neck pass our thyroid gland and even as far down as our lung, before turning around to innervate our voice box, one on each side. Cancer in the neck, lung cancer, strokes, penetrating trauma and surgery to the neck and thyroid are the usual causes that damage this nerve. If this is the case and recovery is not forthcoming, the voice can be improved by surgical treatment that pushes the affected cord to the center to a “closed” position. By re-siting the affected vocal cord to the midline “closed” position, surgeons allow the voice to be reproduced again when the normally functioning opposite vocal cord moves and easily close the gap. Rushing air from the lung re-vibrates the cords once again, turbulence of the air is produced and a voice is regenerated again. This particular treatment is important for these paralyzed vocal cords sufferers, as aside from a more normal voice, upper body strength is improved with an improved cough to maintain a clean and sputum free lung.

Remember, our voice is important and most loss of voice conditions are mild, short-lasting with full recovery. A persistent hoarse voice should not be regarded as normal as diagnosis is easily made with endoscopy in a clinic setting. Timely treatment ensures a good quality strong voice either by medication, speech therapy, surgery or all a combination of treatment to suit the problem.

Dr Gordon Soo, The ENTific Centre





Reference: Entific.com.hk/voice-loss-treatment.html
The information aims to provide educational purpose only. Anyone reading it should consult ENT Specialists before considering treatment and should not rely on the information above.

Monday, January 16, 2017

Voice Loss (Part One)

Humans are social beings. We communicate with others using our voice as well as body language. So it naturally becomes a problem when we lose our voice.

We make our voice in our larynx. Here sit two ligaments called vocal cords, that are joined together in the front and sit apart at the back, like an open “V”. The vocal cords are covered with a soft mucosa lining, and lie horizontally immediately above our windpipe, acting as two guards protecting our airway.

So how do these two vocal cords make a voice? We need two things to occur for sound to be made. First the two vocal cords are brought together by a muscle, and at the same time, air from our lung is expelled through these closed cords. The air passing through our cords cause the mucosa covering to vibrate, and hence a sound (voice) is made. 

The pitch of this sound, our voice, is changed by other muscles tightening or relaxing the tension of the vocal ligaments. When the vocal ligaments are tightened, the voice becomes higher pitched, like when we strum a tightly stretched guitar string to create a higher note. For a lower tone sound, the tension is reduced, and a lower, more bass voice is produced. The voice of children, adult males and adult females also vary due to the size of the vocal cords and the “laryngeal” box that it sits in. 

A shorter vocal cord in a smaller box as in children produce a shriller, high tone voice whilst at the other extreme, a longer vocal cord in a bigger box of an adult male produces a deeper voice. Here the analogy is that of a child ukulele as compared to an adult double bass. The female adult voice is somewhere in between. So that is how the voice is made. Speech and language which strings sounds together to form words is different. Speech that form words of what we want to say, in the form of phonetics as well as the tone in tonal languages like Putonghua and Cantonese, comes from movements of our tongue above our voice box.

So how do we lose our voice? The commonest cause is an acute inflammation of our larynx (acute laryngitis) e.g. when we catch the flu. The lining of the vocal cords become swollen, inflamed and stiff and the inflammation causes pain when we try to speak. As air passes through the cords, the vibration is impaired. Making a sound is difficult as well as painful, and the voice changes to a very hoarse rasp or total loss altogether.


Another way that voice production can be impaired is if there is a growth on a vocal cord that prevents both the vocal cords from coming together perfectly. Conditions that could do this are e.g. cancer of the vocal cords commonly seen in smokers. These growths tents open the gap between the cords, and allows air to leak through the gap, making voice production inefficient at best, and sometimes impossible at worst.

The ultimate voice loss occurs when the vocal cords cannot come together. This is definitely an uncommon condition. We need both vocal cords to vibrate to make a sound. When one of the vocal cords cannot be drawn close, the gap between the vocal cord is too wide for turbulence of the air, and therefore sound, to made by the passing air. It is the same as when we try to whistle. We can only make a whistle with “closed” lips and not an “open” mouth. Here the reasons why a cord cannot “close” is usually due to damage to the nerve that supplies the “closing” muscle of that vocal cord.

To lose one’s voice is not unusual at all and most voices recover very quickly. However, a persistent hoarse voice or loss of voice for more than three weeks is not normal. If this continues, further medical attention for a diagnosis would normally be advised.
 .......cont'l

Dr Gordon Soo, The ENTific Centre
 

 






The information aims to provide educational purpose only. Anyone reading it should consult ENT Specialists before considering treatment and should not rely on the information above.

Monday, April 11, 2016

Voice Loss (Part Two)



In the first part of this article, we understand how our voice is produced, and in simple terms, how we lose our voice. Losing our voice is a problem for anyone as we are always communicating our wishes, dreams, love and needs to others.

So what can we do if we lose our voice? Firstly, we should not panic as common things happen commonly, and the commonest cause by far, is an acute viral laryngitis. The swelling from acute laryngitis is usually maximal at three days, after which the swelling subsides gradually, and the voice gradually returns to normal. During the inflamed phase, sufferers are best advised not to use their voice, as continuing voice use could damage and permanently scar the vocal cord lining. This scarring could result in a permanent hoarse voice by impairing the movement of the mucosal lining over the vocal ligaments.

Losing one’s voice is not unusual at all and most voices recover very quickly. If our voice doesn’t return to normal and you remain hoarse beyond three weeks, medical attention to make a diagnosis and to prevent long term irreversible damage would be recommended. Your ENT Surgeon can easily inspect your voice box by performing a flexible endoscopic examination of the larynx. So what conditions can cause chronic loss of voice that can be seen by endoscopy?

A growth on one or both vocal cords can prevent optimal closure of the cords. Excess air then leaks through the gap and voice production is impaired in terms of quality as well as intensity of the voice. Commonly the early formation of vocal cord nodules is the cause. Two non-cancerous thickening of the vocal cords on exactly opposite vocal cord surfaces prevent the cords from coming together well. With the leak, the voice is lost, and we try even harder to produce a voice by speaking louder. This means that the nodules can get bigger, and the hoarseness continues. Treatment here is primarily by speech therapy to re-educate the user how to use their voice better like a singer. If the nodules are too large and /or speech therapy has not worked, then phonosurgery to trim away the nodules may be necessary. If a growth is seen only on one vocal cord, then early surgery may be necessary to exclude cancer. Here the lesion is examined close up, excised and sent for testing. If it is cancerous, then follow up treatment protocols will be advised. However if the lesion looks like a cyst or a polyp under close up endoscopic examination during surgery, the lesion is removed with gentle and careful preservation of the vocal cord lining. This is called phonosurgery and requires great skill. The removal of the lesion is both diagnostic (as we sent the lesion for testing to know what it is) as well as also therapeutic (as the hoarse voice is treated as well)

A total loss of one’s voice is a catastrophe. This is unusual but it happens when one of the two vocal cords is paralysed. They are unable to meet in the midline, the gap is left wide open and therefore no turbulence or voice can be made. The cause here is damage to the nerve that moves the vocal cord. This nerve travels from our brain, down our neck pass our thyroid gland and even as far down as our lung, before turning around to innervate our voice box, one on each side. Cancer in the neck, lung cancer, strokes, penetrating trauma and surgery to the neck and thyroid are the usual causes that damage this nerve. If this is the case and recovery is not forthcoming, the voice can be improved by surgical treatment that pushes the affected cord to the center to a “closed” position. By re-siting the affected vocal cord to the midline “closed” position, surgeons allow the voice to be reproduced again when the normally functioning opposite vocal cord moves and easily close the gap. Rushing air from the lung re-vibrates the cords once again, turbulence of the air is produced and a voice is regenerated again. This particular treatment is important for these paralyzed vocal cords sufferers, as aside from a more normal voice, upper body strength is improved with an improved cough to maintain a clean and sputum free lung.

Remember, our voice is important and most loss of voice conditions are mild, short-lasting with full recovery. A persistent hoarse voice should not be regarded as normal as diagnosis is easily made with endoscopy in a clinic setting. Timely treatment ensures a good quality strong voice either by medication, speech therapy, surgery or all a combination of treatment to suit the problem.

Dr Gordon Soo, The ENTific Centre





Reference: Entific.com.hk/voice-loss-treatment.html
The information aims to provide educational purpose only. Anyone reading it should consult ENT Specialists before considering treatment and should not rely on the information above.

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Voice Loss (Part One)



Humans are social beings. We communicate with others using our voice as well as body language. So it naturally becomes a problem when we lose our voice.

We make our voice in our larynx. Here sit two ligaments called vocal cords, that are joined together in the front and sit apart at the back, like an open “V”. The vocal cords are covered with a soft mucosa lining, and lie horizontally immediately above our windpipe, acting as two guards protecting our airway.

So how do these two vocal cords make a voice? We need two things to occur for sound to be made. First the two vocal cords are brought together by a muscle, and at the same time, air from our lung is expelled through these closed cords. The air passing through our cords cause the mucosa covering to vibrate, and hence a sound (voice) is made. 

The pitch of this sound, our voice, is changed by other muscles tightening or relaxing the tension of the vocal ligaments. When the vocal ligaments are tightened, the voice becomes higher pitched, like when we strum a tightly stretched guitar string to create a higher note. For a lower tone sound, the tension is reduced, and a lower, more bass voice is produced. The voice of children, adult males and adult females also vary due to the size of the vocal cords and the “laryngeal” box that it sits in. 

A shorter vocal cord in a smaller box as in children produce a shriller, high tone voice whilst at the other extreme, a longer vocal cord in a bigger box of an adult male produces a deeper voice. Here the analogy is that of a child ukulele as compared to an adult double bass. The female adult voice is somewhere in between. So that is how the voice is made. Speech and language which strings sounds together to form words is different. Speech that form words of what we want to say, in the form of phonetics as well as the tone in tonal languages like Putonghua and Cantonese, comes from movements of our tongue above our voice box.

So how do we lose our voice? The commonest cause is an acute inflammation of our larynx (acute laryngitis) e.g. when we catch the flu. The lining of the vocal cords become swollen, inflamed and stiff and the inflammation causes pain when we try to speak. As air passes through the cords, the vibration is impaired. Making a sound is difficult as well as painful, and the voice changes to a very hoarse rasp or total loss altogether.


Another way that voice production can be impaired is if there is a growth on a vocal cord that prevents both the vocal cords from coming together perfectly. Conditions that could do this are e.g. cancer of the vocal cords commonly seen in smokers. These growths tents open the gap between the cords, and allows air to leak through the gap, making voice production inefficient at best, and sometimes impossible at worst.

The ultimate voice loss occurs when the vocal cords cannot come together. This is definitely an uncommon condition. We need both vocal cords to vibrate to make a sound. When one of the vocal cords cannot be drawn close, the gap between the vocal cord is too wide for turbulence of the air, and therefore sound, to made by the passing air. It is the same as when we try to whistle. We can only make a whistle with “closed” lips and not an “open” mouth. Here the reasons why a cord cannot “close” is usually due to damage to the nerve that supplies the “closing” muscle of that vocal cord.

To lose one’s voice is not unusual at all and most voices recover very quickly. However, a persistent hoarse voice or loss of voice for more than three weeks is not normal. If this continues, further medical attention for a diagnosis would normally be advised.
 .......cont'l

Dr Gordon Soo, The ENTific Centre


 

 






The information aims to provide educational purpose only. Anyone reading it should consult ENT Specialists before considering treatment and should not rely on the information above.


Monday, November 16, 2015

Epistaxis / Nosebleeds – What to do

Nosebleeds can happen when you least expect it. At the very least, they are alarming especially with small children, and at the worst, possibly life threatening. So what can you do about the bleeding nose and what action should you take after it has stopped bleeding?

The first thing is to stop the “stoppable” bleeding. Bleeding that comes from the front of the nose can be stopped by pressure. All other bleedings from the middle or back of the nose stops only by your own blood clotting or with medical attention. The first thing to do in a nose bleed is place your head forward, breathe through the mouth and press gently but firmly on the soft part of the nose. This is the lowest third of the nose that you can wiggle with your fingers. Placing your head forward means that you will be less likely to choke and swallow your blood, and any continuing bleeding is clear to see. Pressure should be applied for 15 minutes and this is usually more than enough to stop the small bleed, as our blood will effectively clot in less than 3 minutes. If you are on blood-thinning medication, this can take much longer.


After releasing the pressure, if there is no further active bleeding, this suggests that the bleeding is from the front of the nose. Dry weather and a long flight travel in a dry cabin may be the cause and applying some Vaseline ointment inside the nostrils will help. Seeking the early attention of your ENT Physician would be recommended so that a good check up can be done to prevent further bleeds and treating the underlying cause. You can usually expect that the nose will be clearly visualized with an endoscope of the front, middle and back of the nose. Sometimes a scan of the sinuses may be required as the cavities of the sinuses are not usually visible to the naked eye or endoscope. If a bleeding point is identified, it can be electro-cauterized and this is very successful in preventing future bleeding in 90% of cases. If a nasal allergy causing rhinitis exists, this is also easily treated with medication.


If the bleeding is especially heavy and/or does not stop, it is usually from the middle to the back of the nose. Here the reason is because the vessels are larger and we cannot physically press on them as they are situated inside the face. Situations such as this will require immediate attention at your nearest hospital as you may have lost a lot of blood. Your attending doctor’s priority would be to stop the bleeding first. This is usually undertaken with nasal packs placed into the nose. They are uncomfortable to put in but their intention is life saving. They may then possibly refer you to the ENT Physicians to identify with their special endoscopes where the bleeding is coming from, and treat you accordingly. Nowadays modern endoscopes for the body cavities have revolutionized epistaxis care. After identifying the bleeding point, if appropriate, the source maybe cauterized.




Nosebleeds are frightening for the sufferer as well as family and friends. Thankfully the majority of nosebleeds are minor and easily stopped by pressure as mentioned above. If the bleeding is unduly heavy and does not stop, urgent hospital attention should be sought.

]

Reference: www.entific.com.hk/
The information aims to provide educational purpose only. Anyone reading it should consult ENT Specialists before considering treatment and should not rely on the information above.