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- BookBahman Guyuron.Contents:
Surgical Anatomy and Physiology of the Nose
Patient Assessment for Rhinoplasty
Dynamics of Rhinoplasty
Primary Rhinoplasty
Variations in Nasal Osteotomy : Consequences and Technical Nuances
Tip Sutures
Achieving Optimal Tip Projection
Elongation of the Short Nose
Correction of the Overprojected Nose
Rhinoplasty on Patients with Cleft Lip Nose Deformity
Correction of Alar Rim Deformities
Alar Base Surgery
Controlling the Nostril Size
Rhinoplasty and Time Element
Correcting the Nasal Deformity Resulting from Cocaine Insufflation
Rhinoplasty in Patients with Thick Skin
Correcting Deviated Noses, Septoplasty and Turbinectomy
Rhinoplasty and Ethnicity
Secondary Rhinoplasty
Prevention and Management of Rhinoplasty Complications
Rhinogenic Migraine Headaches.Digital Access ScienceDirect 2012 - ArticleSiegel G.ORL J Otorhinolaryngol Relat Spec. 1978;40(3):160-71.The growth and ageing of tonsils is described by means of the behaviour of the cell count, T cell count, DNA, and organ weight. Proliferation of cells and the influx of recirculating T lymphocytes cause hyperplasia up to the age of 17 approximately, later on the cell count and organ weight decrease again. The number of T cells in cell suspensions from the tonsil is lower than that of blood. Due to the proliferation decrease of B cells and the accumulation of recirculating T lymphocytes, the T cell count in the tonsil increases with advancing years. The tonsil function decrease as a result of this population shift. No influence of the differentiation of T cells by the tonsil can be detected.