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Chapter 11 - Review, finishing touches, and closure

This chapter presents the review, finishing touches, and closing thoughts regarding the empty nose syndrome (ENS). Following our literature review, apparently other observers also agree with us that while the ENS is a relatively uncommon clinical entity, nonetheless, it is a strikingly important postturbinate treatment condition because of the profound physical suffering that patients experience especially with breathing difficulties and a surprisingly high incidence of disabling emotional anguish, including suicidal ideation, experienced by so many of these patients. We journey through and beyond the “empty nose syndrome,” appropriately so, as we contemporaneously, almost up to the very minute, offer an overview as to where we are and where we, as a profession, need to go first by protecting patients by preventing ENS when we manage the turbinates and when needed, treating those patients plagued with “empty nose syndrome.” The landmark randomized turbinate study of Passali et al. who followed their 382 patients, carefully collecting objective breathing and other physiologic data, at 4 and 6 years after treatment, recommended: “…submucosal resection combined with lateral displacement as the first-choice technique for the treatment of nasal obstruction due to hypertrophy of the inferior turbinates.” Presently, this study has the longest follow-up period to date and demonstrates that submucosal resection provides the greatest improvement in long-term nasal airway breathing capacity, while reestablishing mucociliary clearance and normalizing IgA production. The addition of out-fracture (lateralization) to the submucosal resection improved longstanding 6-year outcomes. Notwithstanding these conclusions, this study was omitted from the Cochrane (2010) review due to failure to use stringent criteria for patient selection.

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Chapter 7 - The turbinates—management

This chapter presents the management of the turbinates. The debate regarding middle turbinate preservation has a heated history of disagreement raging for more than a century, the rhinologic equivalent of the Hundred Years’ War, 1337–1453, in the blossom of the Middle Ages. Middle turbinate “resectors” are surgeons who remorselessly rationalize resection of the middle turbinate to forestall formation of synechia in the region of the middle meatus. Proponents on the other side of the divide champion respecting not resecting the middle turbinate for its importance as a critical anatomical landmark and as an independent functional organ system. In the absence of certainty from RTCs, we champion saving the middle turbinate for both physiologic function and as a critical anatomic landmark, especially for potential revision surgery in patients with CRS harboring recurrent polypoid disease. It was Passali et al. in 1999 and 2003, respectively, (n = 382) who confirmed (at four and six years follow-up) that turbinoplasty accompanied with an out-fracture (lateralization) is an effective approach to inferior turbinate enlargement (“hypertrophy”) when compared to electrocautery, cryotherapy, laser cautery, turbinectomy, and submucosal resection without an out-fracture (lateral displacement). Their work confirmed the superiority of turbinoplasty with an out-fracture (lateralization) over all other methods studied.211,216211216

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Chapter 10 - Medical journals: judging the quality of the editors, the peer reviewers, plus the issue of plagiarism

This chapter presents judging the quality of the editors, the peer reviewers, plus the issue of plagiarism in medical journals. Journals can be and often are extremely influential voices in setting standards of accepting and adjudicating submitted research to accurately and unbiasedly update and inform the profession. We depend upon the editors and their legions of peer reviewers for supreme sagacity with soaring standards of integrity when reviewing the submitted texts of thinking and data-rich experimental findings. Our unwritten covenant with the peer reviewers and their editors is they all act in the best interest of the profession, ultimately that is translated into, for the best interest of the patient. Recently, in the year 2019, there was comprehensive assessment of peer review reports searching for tools for determining the quality of peer reviewers and their submissions. Those authors plan to continue the quest for new validated quality assessment tools for peer review reports in biomedical research. Numerous critics of the review process asked questions such as the following:1.Is peer review: a flawed process at the heart of science and journals?2.Who reviews the reviewers?3.Editorial peer reviewers’ recommendations at a general medical journal: are they reliable and do editors care?4.Rereviewing peer review.5.Peer review for biomedical publications: we can improve the system.6.Make peer review scientific.7.Custodians of high-quality science: are editors and peer reviewers good enough?

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