pubmed-article:1528598 | rdf:type | pubmed:Citation | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0018681 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:1528598 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0024957 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:1528598 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0228731 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:1528598 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0149663 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:1528598 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0042221 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:1528598 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C1524003 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:1528598 | lifeskim:mentions | umls-concept:C0220784 | lld:lifeskim |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:issue | 1 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:dateCreated | 1992-10-20 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:abstractText | Vacuum disorders of the paranasal sinuses are well described. Patients with facial pain in the distribution of the infraorbital nerve are often labelled as suffering from a "vacuum maxillary sinusitis" and empirically treated by intranasal antrostomy. A variety of mechanisms have been postulated for the production of symptoms in this condition, but all ignore the fact that the maxillary sinus is a relatively insensitive structure. This article introduces a dehiscence of the bony infraorbital nerve canal within the antrum as an anatomic variant and suggests that it may provide the anatomic basis for vacuum sinusitis in the presence of a small natural ostium. Definitive diagnosis is made by outpatient antroscopy, and surgical treatment takes the form of a middle or inferior meatal antrostomy. Persistent symptoms may benefit from an infraorbital neuropexy to provide added protection to the exposed nerve. | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:language | eng | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:journal | http://linkedlifedata.com/r... | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:citationSubset | IM | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:status | MEDLINE | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:month | Jul | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:issn | 0194-5998 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:author | pubmed-author:WhittenH DHD | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:issnType | Print | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:volume | 107 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:owner | NLM | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:authorsComplete | Y | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:pagination | 21-8 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:dateRevised | 2004-11-17 | lld:pubmed |
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pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:year | 1992 | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:articleTitle | Infraorbital nerve dehiscence: the anatomic cause of maxillary sinus "vacuum headache"? | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:affiliation | ENT Department, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford, England. | lld:pubmed |
pubmed-article:1528598 | pubmed:publicationType | Journal Article | lld:pubmed |
http://linkedlifedata.com/r... | pubmed:referesTo | pubmed-article:1528598 | lld:pubmed |