Jeffrey Landis [not his real name], 74, had been complaining of swallowing problems for a couple of months.
Allergy Research Gets High Evidence-Based Medicine Rankings
Several treatments for allergy-related disease have high-quality evidence to support them, according to panelists at a seminar in Chicago at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (AAO-HNS), which focused on evidence-based medicine as the model applies to allergy.
Should Surgery Be First-Line Treatment for Head and Neck Cancer?
Carbon Dioxide Laser Scores Well on Patient Tolerance in the Office
A flexible carbon dioxide laser caused patients less pain and burning than the more traditionally used pulsed-dye laser in office-based treatment of benign diseases of the larynx, researchers have reported.
The Latest in Hearing Aid Technology
Losing Sleep over Residents’ Work Week Restrictions
Medical residents used to work shifts so long that fatigue blurred their vision, clouded their judgment, and overall put them on the brink of mental and physical exhaustion.
Efforts Under Way to Improve Assessment of Operative Competency
At the 2007 annual meeting of the American Academy of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery (AAO-HNS), investigators from Johns Hopkins University and the University of Kansas reported on a needs assessment that identified a number of issues related to improving the formal assessment of operative competency among otolaryngologists-head and neck surgeons.
Early Vocal Fold Cancer Presents Delicate Choices
What Is the Effect of ACGME Duty Hours Regulations?
Bioentrepreneurship: A Prime
A quick scan of course offerings and lecture titles at medical meetings shows that bioentrepreneurship is a growing phenomenon in the United States.
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