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  • Book
    [editor-in-chief], Rick A. Friedman ; [associate editors], William H. Slattery III [and others].
    Summary: It is an insightfully organized text of advanced surgical techniques that will assist any training or practicing surgeon caring for those with acoustic schwannomas and other skull base pathology.

    Contents:
    Orbitozygomatic craniotomy / Gregory P. Lekovic [and others]
    The subtemporal approach / Marc S. Schwartz
    The middle cranial fossa approach to vestibular schwannomas / Rick A. Friedman and Jose N. Fayad
    The infracochlear/infralabyrinthine approach to the petrous apex / Derald E. Brackmann and J. Walter Kutz Jr.
    The retrosigmoid approach / Jose N. Fayad, Rick A. Friedman, and Marc S. Schwartz
    The translabyrinthine approach to the skull base / William H. Slattery
    The transcochlear approach to cerebellopontine angle and clivus lesions / Antonio De la Cruz, Karen Borne Teufert, and Jose N. Fayad
    The combined petrosal approach to the petroclival region / Rick A. Friedman, Marc S. Schwartz, and Eric P. Wilkinson
    The far lateral approach / Gregory P. Lekovic, Marc S. Schwartz, and Felipe Santos
    The fisch infratemporal fossa approach : type A / William H. Slattery and J. Walter Kutz Jr.
    The fisch infratemporal fossa approach : types B and C / Derald E. Brackmann and Robert Cullen
    The pre-auricular infratemporal approach / Rick A. Friedman and James Lin
    Temporal bone resection / Antonio De la Cruz and James Lin
    Microvascular cranial nerve decompression / Derald E. Brackmann and Marc S. Schwartz
    Complications of neurotologic surgery / John W. House and Robert Cullen
    Auditory brainstem implants / Jose N. Fayad [and others]
    The fine points of vestibular schwannoma dissection from within the internal auditory canal / William E. Hitselberger, Marc S. Schwartz, and Rick A. Friedman.
    Digital Access
    Provider
    Version
    Thieme MedOne Otolaryngology
    Thieme MedOne Neurosurgery
  • Article
    Dunkelberg WE.
    Sex Transm Dis. 1977 Apr-Jun;4(2):69-75.
    Corynebacterium vaginale is a sexually transmitted organism which was first recognized in 1953. It appears to utilize glycogen stored in vaginal epithelial cells, causing a malodorous vaginal discharge characterized by an abnormally high pH (5.0 to 5.5) and composed mainly of epithelial cells and hordes of bacilli. Infected men are asymptomatic, carry the organism for an unknown period of time, and transmit it through intercourse. The organism requires five B-vitamins, purines, pyrimidines, and a fermentable carbohydrate; neither factors X nor V are required. It is not a member of genus Haemophilus and is not likely to be a Corynebacterium. Appearing mainly Gram-negative, it has many characteristics of Gram-positive organisms including its pattern of sensitivity to antibiotics and the possession of certain enzyme systems. As the cause of bacterial vaginitis, C. vaginale may be the most prevalent sexually-transmitted organism.
    Digital Access Access Options