Volume : VII, Issue : X, October - 2018
LARYNGEAL PALSY SECONDARY TO A NON-INFECTIVE CHEST PATHOLOGY
Bhagyashree A. Sagane, Haritosh K. Velankar, Apoorva Salguti, Cassandra A. Carvalho, Yogesh G. Dabholkar
Abstract :
As Otorhinolaryngologists it is relatively common to encounter patients with hoarseness of voice on a daily outpatient basis. Many a times it is secondary to vocal cord palsy. The Recurrent Laryngeal and Superior Laryngeal nerves are a crucial element in phonation. Damage to either of them or both is one of the common causes for this presentation. Very frequently, patients we see on the outpatient basis with this complaint go uninvestigated and undiagnosedwith a secondary cause. A missed or delayed diagnosis may lead to an erroneous treatment plan.
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DOI : https://www.doi.org/10.36106/paripex
Cite This Article:
Bhagyashree A. Sagane, Haritosh K. Velankar, Apoorva Salguti, Cassandra A. Carvalho, Yogesh G. Dabholkar, LARYNGEAL PALSY SECONDARY TO A NON-INFECTIVE CHEST PATHOLOGY, PARIPEX‾INDIAN JOURNAL OF RESEARCH : Volume-7 | Issue-10 | October-2018
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Bhagyashree A. Sagane, Haritosh K. Velankar, Apoorva Salguti, Cassandra A. Carvalho, Yogesh G. Dabholkar, LARYNGEAL PALSY SECONDARY TO A NON-INFECTIVE CHEST PATHOLOGY, PARIPEX‾INDIAN JOURNAL OF RESEARCH : Volume-7 | Issue-10 | October-2018