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Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery at Weill Cornell Medical College Otology and Neurotology Rhinology and Sinus Disorders Laryngology, Voice, and Dysphagia Head and Neck Surgery Pediatric Otolaryngology Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery General Otolaryngology Fifth EDITION Breaking the Sound Barrier How We Are Advancing Treatment for Hearing Loss SAVE THE DATE 7th Annual Symposium Otolaryngology Update in NYC Featuring Distinguished Local and National Faculty October 24 - 25, 2013 Course Description This 2-day course will provide the practicing Otolaryngologist-Head and Neck Surgeon with an update on the latest diagnostic and therapeutic techniques, including surgical management for the following subspecialties: • Otology and Neurotology • Rhinology and Sinus Disorders • Laryngology, Voice, and Dysphagia • Head and Neck Surgery • Pediatric Otolaryngology • Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery • General Otolaryngology Course Co-Directors Special Guest Faculty Michael G. Stewart, MD, MPH Professor and Chairman Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Weill Cornell Medical College Vice Dean Weill Cornell Medical College Robert C. Kern, MD Chairman Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Samuel H. Selesnick, MD Professor and Vice Chairman Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Weill Cornell Medical College Presented by Weill Cornell Medical College Location Westin New York at Times Square 270 West 43rd Street between 7th and 8th Avenues New York, NY 10036 For More Information Jessica Grajales CME Coordinator Tel: (212) 585-6800 Fax: (212) 297-5569 email: [email protected] Gregory N. Postma, MD Director Center for Voice and Swallowing Disorders Medical College of Georgia Ashok R. Shaha, MD Chairman, Head and Neck Surgery and Oncology Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Steven A. Telian, MD Professor, Otolaryngology University of Michigan Health System Tom D. Wang, MD President American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Oregon Health and Science University Regional Guest Faculty Dean C. Mitchell, MD Clinical Assistant Professor Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine Weill Cornell Medical College Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Faculty Kevin D. Brown, MD, PhD Marc A. Cohen, MD Ashutosh Kacker, MBBS Michelle L. Kraskin, AuD William I. Kuhel, MD David I. Kutler, MD Joshua I. Levinger, MD Kate E. McCarn, MD Vikash K. Modi, MD Joseph J. Montano, EdD Aaron N. Pearlman, MD Mukesh Prasad, MD William R. Reisacher, MD Rita M. Roure, MD Lucian Sulica, MD Maria V. Suurna, MD Andrea Wang, MD Weill Cornell Medical College Guest Faculty Vijay K. Anand, MD Gina Czark Hillary D. Johnson, MD, PhD Gary J. Lelli, Jr., MD C. Douglas Phillips, MD Haviva Veler, MD Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons Otolaryngology Residency Guest Faculty Lanny Garth Close, MD Chairman, Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Chandra M. Ivey, MD Anil K. Lalwani, MD Jaclyn B. Spitzer, PhD Monica Tadros, MD Contents Message From the Chair 2 New West Side Practice Opens 3 Breaking the Sound Barrier: How We Are Advancing Treatment for Hearing Loss4 Creating a Team Approach to Cutaneous Oncology8 A Paradoxical Laryngeal Disorder Rooted in a Disorder of Breathing 10 Clinical Innovation: A New Tool to Test for Allergies11 Academic Highlights News and Notes 14 Selected Publications 16 Residency Update 20 Professional Education 20 Department Faculty 22 1 Message From the Chair W e are pleased to bring you the latest brochure from our Department. Since our last report, we have celebrated many notable events. At the Medical College, we are concluding a $1.3 billion fundraising campaign – the largest ever by a medical college – capped off by the construction of the new Belfer Research Building on our Upper East Side Manhattan campus. Weill Cornell has welcomed a new Dean, Dr. Laurie Glimcher, who is already making a significant positive impact on the College, including the recruitment of a Director for our new Cancer Center. We have also opened a beautiful new outpatient practice facility on the Upper West Side, and the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery will play a major role at that location. Our partner hospital, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, is completing a merger with New York Downtown Hospital in lower Manhattan, which will be another campus for the Weill Cornell faculty practice expansion and our Department will have two faculty based there this year. I was also honored to be appointed by Dean Glimcher as the Vice Dean of the Medical College in 2012. In the Department, Dr. Sam Selesnick has completed his term as President of the American Neurotology Society, and I completed my term as President of the Association of Academic Departments of Otolaryngology-HNS. Several of our faculty hold leadership positions in regional and national societies, including Dr. William Reisacher, who was elected to the Board of the American Academy of Otolaryngic Allergy, and Dr. David Kutler, who serves as President of the New York Head and Neck Society. The Weill Cornell/NewYork-Presbyterian Center for the Performing Artist – which is based in our Department – continues to grow, and is now an official health care provider for the Metropolitan Opera and the Juilliard School, as well as providing care for many others in the large performing artist community in New York City. Our clinical programs all continue to grow and prosper, and we sponsor several highly rated and well-attended CME and CEU programs every year. Thanks again for your interest in our Department, and we hope you enjoy the brochure. Sincerely, Michael G. Stewart, MD, MPH Professor and Chairman Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Vice Dean Weill Cornell Medical College 2 Dr. Michael G. Stewart New West Side Practice Opens T he Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery recently celebrated the opening of its West Side Practice offices, located within the new Weill Cornell Physician Organization’s multispecialty practice located at 84th Street and Broadway. The Department’s West Side Practice provides the same comprehensive care available through its primary practice site in the Weill Greenberg Center at 1305 York Avenue. A brightly lit and spacious waiting room provides a warm welcome to patients, while large and modern exam rooms enhance the patient care experience. Hearing testing and hearing aid services are also available in the new facilities. Members of the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery join in the opening of the new Weill Cornell West Side Practice facility. They are (from left) Marc A. Cohen, MD; Samuel H. Selesnick, MD, Vice Chairman; Kate E. McCarn, MD; Vikash K. Modi, MD; Joseph J. Montano, EdD; Maria V. Suurna, MD; and David I. Kutler, MD. Breaking the Sound Barrier: How We Are Advancing Treatment for Hearing Loss I n the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery of Weill Cornell Medical College, an interdisciplinary team of surgeons, audiologists, and clinicianscientists are pooling their respective expertise and resources to advance treatment for individuals with severe to profound sensorineural hearing loss. “Refining criteria for cochlear implant candidates, pursuing progress in cochlear implant surgical techniques, and researching hearing loss at its most basic level are the key components of the Department’s efforts to improve the outcomes for those who are hearing impaired,” says Samuel H. Selesnick, MD, Vice Chairman for the Department and a specialist in otology and neurotology. “The collaboration among our cochlear implant team members allows for optimal selection of patients and the seamless exchange of relevant information. It is particularly important in the management of expectations on the part of the patient and the patient’s family.” Attacking Hearing Loss in the Laboratory Accumulation of free radicals, which can be caused by environmental stress from intense noise, aging, and trauma, plays a key role in hearing loss and cell death in the inner ear. Kevin D. Brown, MD, PhD, is trying to alter these outcomes through research he is pursuing in the laboratory on a class of molecules called sirtuins. Dr. Kevin D. Brown and Dr. Samuel H. Selesnick to unravel the mechanisms of how sirtuins exert this effect, attention has focused on cell types that are acutely sensitive to the effects of aging. One such cell type is the hair cells and neurons of the inner ear, which can degenerate leading to hearing loss associated with aging. If you can increase the activity of sirtuins, you can increase longevity of these organ systems. There have been some reports that suggest that if an animal is calorie restricted, which activates this particular class of enzymes – particularly sirtuin-3 – they could actually prevent age-associated hearing loss.” “Sirtuins have been found to extend life in some cell types and simple organisms,” explains Dr. Brown. “As research has begun From that initial research, Dr. Brown began to look at ways to activate these sirtuins independent of calorie restriction. “One of the ways to sirtuin activity is to increase a particular energetic coenzyme called NAD found in all living cells,” says Dr. Brown. “By increasing levels of this particular component you can actually activate these enzymes. I wanted to identify whether these compounds could prevent hearing loss.” Using genetically modified mouse models, Dr. Kevin Brown and his colleagues found that animals that had an increased level of sirtuin-3 were found to be protected against noise-induced hearing loss. Looking at noise-induced hearing loss, Dr. Brown and his colleagues used genetically modified mouse models to both 4 naturally produce more NAD or to have more of sirtuin-3. They evaluated whether these animals were less likely to have hearing loss from a free radical injury, specifically noise exposure. They found that this was, in fact, the case. Animals that either had an increased capacity for producing NAD or an increased level of sirtuin-3 were found to be protected against noise-induced hearing loss. Dr. Brown, in collaboration with Weill Cornell colleagues Samie R. Jaffrey, MD, PhD, Professor of Pharmacology, and Anthony A. Sauve, PhD, Associate Professor of Pharmacology, then utilized a compound synthesized by Dr. Sauve that could increase to hearing loss utilize a common pathway where there is free radical injury. We may be able to prevent in a very logical fashion those types of injuries – whether from Meniere’s disease, noise exposure, aging, or other types of injury – from leading to permanent hearing loss.” Advancing Cochlear Implant Technique and Technology In the Department’s Hearing and Speech Center under the direction of Joseph J. Montano, EdD, 17 certified audiologists and speech language pathologists provide state-of-the-art diagnostic and rehabilitative services for disorders of hearing, speech, language, voice, and swallowing for children and adults. As Hannah E. Shonfield, AuD, Supervisor, Audiology, explains, “Many patients – especially those who are dissatisfied with their current hearing aid – come in seeking information about cochlear implants in the hope that they are a candidate for this device. But if they are not, we examine what we can do to rehabilitate their hearing loss through other avenues.” “We may be able to prevent in a very logical fashion those types of injuries – whether from Meniere’s disease, noise exposure, aging, or other types of injury – from leading to permanent hearing loss.” — Kevin D. Brown, MD, PhD NAD and administered it to the animals before they were subjected to noise exposure that would typically cause injury to the cochlea. “We found that this drug effectively prevented them from having both the short-term transient loss as well as the long-term loss of hearing that occurs with noise exposure,” says Dr. Brown. “We were able to demonstrate that the compound, nicotinamide riboside, activates sirtuin-3 and prevents these animals from developing the typical type of hearing loss that occurs with noise exposure. This was really quite incredible.” Dr. Brown is now evaluating which structures within the cochlea are protected against noise-induced injury with this compound. The goal of this research is to provide an alternative pharmacologic approach to damage associated with acute inner ear injury, whatever the cause. “What is particularly interesting,” says Dr. Brown, “many, if not all, of the conditions that lead Dr. Michelle Kraskin Michelle Kraskin, AuD, Supervisor, Audiology, specializes in pediatric patients needing cochlear implants, with their youngest patient implanted at nine months. “Children who have bilateral profound sensorineural hearing loss are implant candidates as long as the cochlear nerve is present,” says Dr. Kraskin. Drs. Shonfield and Kraskin collaborate with Dr. Selesnick and Kevin D. Brown, MD, PhD, not only on clinical care for adults and children who are cochlear implant 5 pocket in the standard implant position in light of concerns regarding migration of the receiver-stimulator and damage to a non-recessed electrode lead. “We wanted to determine the incidence of these potential complications by prospectively evaluating a cohort of patients receiving cochlear implants at Weill Cornell using the subperiosteal pocket technique, which does not require bony drilling of the calvarium or exposure of the dura,” says Dr. Selesnick. In traditional procedures, the receiverstimulator component is seated in its place by drilling a well into the calvarium that houses the receiver-stimulator unit, which is then secured using fixation via bony tiedown sutures. This technique carries with it a small but veritable risk of intracranial complications, such as a cerebrospinal fluid leak, subdural hematoma, and epidural hematoma, and has also been associated with instances of receiver-stimulator migration. “Migration can lead to uncomfortable or dysfunctional interaction with the external speech processor and requires revision surgery,” says Dr. Brown, who specializes in the surgical rehabilitation of hearing loss by cochlear implantation. Dr. Kevin D. Brown candidates, but also on research to further advance this technology. When Dr. Brown joined Weill Cornell, he brought with him advanced training in minimally invasive cochlear implant surgery having trained as a fellow at the University of Miami, which pioneered the procedure. “The faculty there determined that you could successfully implant the cochlear device with a much smaller incision – 4.5 cm behind the ear – and less invasive approaches than had been typically performed,” says Dr. Brown. Currently, instead of performing a specific bony fixation of the device, Dr. Brown and his colleagues have been using a soft-tissue subperiosteal pocket to accommodate the implant. “The technique works extremely well,” says Dr. Brown. “The cochlear implant sits in a very tight pocket between the bone and the pericranium, which is the layer of connective tissue over the skull, and holds the device in place. We then suture the bottom of the pocket to tighten it further so that the pocket is the exact size of the implant. Because the technique eliminates the necessity of drilling into the skull, it is particularly advantageous in children as their skulls are very thin.” Their study looked at 31 ears (18 adults, 13 children) implanted utilizing the subperiosteal 1 3 Weill Cornell faculty recently completed a study to evaluate the placement of the receiver-stimulator in the subperiosteal 6 2 The surgical technique of subperiosteal receiver-stimulator implantation involves: (1) creation of a subperiosteal pocket with a periosteal elevator (2) sizing of the pocket with a silastic dummy receiverstimulator, and (3) placement of the receiver-stimulator in the subperiosteal pocket technique, with an average patient age of 22 months for children and 58 years for adults. “Our findings support the safety and efficacy of the subperiosteal technique,” notes Dr. Selesnick. “There were no cases of receiver-stimulator migration or intracranial complications.” The surgeons also found the technique amenable to varied positioning of the receiver-stimulator to accommodate anatomical factors and the age of the patient. Importantly, if any difficulty in fitting the receiver-stimulator using the subperiosteal pocket is encountered during surgery, the approach may be converted to the standard technique during device implantation. However, the team has to date not needed to convert any cases to the traditional approach. The study is ongoing and the team will continue to follow implanted patients, as well as enroll new patients. been some success with the use of steroids, but newer compounds that can help prevent degeneration will be extremely helpful. “We are very excited about some of the newer applications of cochlear implants,” notes Dr. Brown. “One of the major applications that I believe is going to become an important treatment modality is for patients who have lost hearing on one side – particularly for those who have lost it recently – and have normal hearing in the other ear. Although this may seem logical to people outside the field, to people inside the field it’s revolutionary because we have always thought that a patient would not be able to process both the electrical information provided by an implant and the acoustic information provided by normal hearing. It would be like someone speaking in Japanese in one ear and German in the other.” “Our findings support the safety and efficacy of the subperiosteal technique. There were no cases of receiver-stimulator migration or intracranial complications.” Notes Dr. Brown, important work in this area is increasingly demonstrating that patients who completely lose hearing in one ear but have normal hearing in the other do much better with a cochlear implant than they do with basically any other treatment modality currently available. As the brain adapts, they are able to incorporate both acoustical and electrical information and use it in a way that improves speech understanding, sound localization, and quality of life. — Samuel H. Selesnick, MD According to Dr. Brown, another important consideration during cochlear implantation is preventing injury to the cochlea during the procedure. “When you put a cochlear implant in the cochlea, the hair cells that are responsible for picking up the vibration of sound and converting it to an electrical signal that goes to the brain stem can become injured or lost either immediately or over time after the implant is placed,” says Dr. Brown. “This is of particular concern in patients who still have some residual hearing – particularly in the lower frequencies. So we are looking at interventions that help to preserve the natural structure of the cochlea and prevent its degeneration. There has Dr. Brown and colleagues are currently embarking on an extensive prospective study evaluating changes in quality of life, perceived hearing handicap, and tinnitus handicap in patients that have lost hearing on one side and receive a cochlear implant. 7 Creating a Team Approach to Cutaneous Oncology I t was truly a meeting of minds when a year ago Kate E. McCarn, MD, a facial plastic surgeon; Marc A. Cohen, MD, and David I. Kutler, MD, head and neck surgeons; Hillary D. Johnson, MD, PhD, a specialist in Mohs micrographic surgery and high-risk skin cancer screening with Weill Cornell’s Department of Dermatology; Garrett T. Desman, MD, a dermatopathologist in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine; along with medical and radiation oncologists, ocular and general plastic surgeons, pathologists, and radiologists came together to pool their expertise and resources for patients with skin cancer by establishing the multispecialty Cutaneous Oncology Group. The group had its origins when Drs. McCarn, Cohen, Johnson, Desman, and others got together to talk about a specific case. “We thought it would be a good idea if we held regular discussions to review difficult cases,” recalls Dr. Cohen. “That way everyone could be on board with all of the issues that arise with patients who need care from multiple experts.” The group now gathers monthly to review and develop treatment plans for challenging cases. It also serves as a forum for discussing new research and topics of common interest and provides an educational opportunity for residents as well. Dr. Kutler agrees. “It used to be, at least for skin cancer, that we would work independently. Some of these skin cancers, especially complicated tumors with aggressive behaviors that cross multiple boundaries, need a multidisciplinary approach,” says Dr. Kutler. “The group allows us to provide better care for these more complicated cutaneous malignancies.” According to Dr. Kutler, head and neck surgeons become involved in planning and treatment when the cancer is more invasive, reaching into deeper structures where the eye, nose, or skull base is involved, or if the cancer metastasizes to the neck. “With deeper melanomas, we will also be called in to do sentinel node biopsies to determine the extent of the cancer,” says Dr. Kutler. “You really need a team to care for patients with invasive skin cancers.” Through the Cutaneous Oncology Group, patients receive seamless care within the same facility on the same day. For example, Dr. Johnson will perform Mohs surgery to remove a cancerous growth and, depending on the extent of tissue removed, she will refer the patient to Dr. McCarn, whose office is only four floors below. Dr. McCarn will then address any facial restoration or reconstruction that is needed that same day. Appointments with a head and neck surgeon will also take place, if necessary. Dr. Kate E. McCarn and Dr. Hillary D. Johnson “When people have cancer, it really requires input and intervention by multiple practitioners,” says Dr. Cohen. “The best thing for the patient is a group of people with different areas of expertise who together develop a treatment plan. The Cutaneous Oncology Group was formed to enable all of us to provide that kind of collaborative and comprehensive care for our patients.” “It really is a collaborative effort,” says Dr. McCarn. “For patients who have very big cancers or complex defects, we are able to coordinate their visits with each of the appropriate medical or surgical specialists, most of whom are located in the same 8 Dr. David I. Kutler and Dr. Marc A. Cohen building. This not only optimizes the success of treatment, including functional and aesthetic outcomes, it also makes the overall experience for the patient much less stressful.” “It’s great for the patient when the doctor can come back and say, ‘Listen, I talked to seven other people about you, and we all agree that this is the right thing to do,’” says Dr. Cohen. “The more experience that you have with an issue, the more informed your decisions will be. So if you have multiple people with years of experience getting together, the decisions about how to treat the patient will be that much better.” aggressive than the typical skin cancer – to identify what makes these tumors different. According to research reported in 2005 in The New England Journal of Medicine, melanoma should not be classified as one disease since it appears to have distinct developmental pathways related to anatomic site, degree of sun exposure, genetics, and possibly other factors. With the rate of cutaneous melanoma continuing to rise and the fact that currently no effective treatments are available for advanced melanoma, defining differences among the different types is of paramount importance. Spearheaded by Weill Cornell dermatopathologist Dr. Garrett Desman, whose research interests are focused on adnexal neoplasia and malignant melanoma, the team has begun investigating melanocytic tumors of uncertain malignant potential – a subset of rare skin cancers that are more “We are compiling tissue samples and data on patients with these interesting tumors to one day allow us to identify the more aggressive tumors,” says Dr. McCarn. “This will enable us to predict which patients may need treatment earlier and which interventions will lead to the best outcomes.” To investigate the usefulness of a novel marker for melanocytic proliferations, Dr. Garrett Desman and his colleagues used a novel monoclonal antibody against soluble adenylyl cyclase, immunostaining various benign and malignant melanocytic proliferations. 9 A Paradoxical Laryngeal Disorder Rooted in a Disorder of Breathing W hen Thomas Murry, PhD, speaks, people listen. An internationally recognized voice scientist and speech-language pathologist with more than 40 years of clinical and research expertise in voice disorders, Dr. Murry has authored or coauthored 12 books for speech pathologists and otolaryngologists. asthma, but on pulmonary examination their lungs are normal. “These kids rarely have asthma or other pulmonary diseases. They have an airway issue at the level of the vocal folds,” says Dr. Murry. “In the early ‘70s the National Jewish Hospital in Denver published a paper that reported on patients who were refractory to asthma treatment and instead had a voice disorder. Pulmonologists referred to it as vocal cord dysfunction; ENT specialists gave it the name paradoxical vocal fold motion disorder.” For more than a decade, Dr. Murry has had a particular interest in paradoxical vocal fold motion (PVFM) – a laryngeal disorder that disrupts breathing even though the lungs may be normal. “Paradoxical vocal fold motion PVFM is diagnosed with laryngeal endoscopy. “We look at the vocal folds with a flexible endoscope, which allows us to actually see this closing motion,” says Dr. Murry. In an article published in the December 2011 issue of Respiratory Medicine, Dr. Murry and his colleagues report on a study they undertook using both endoscopy and spirometry during periods of no exercise to determine the differences between patients with PVFM compared to a group of normal subjects – one of the first studies of its kind. The data confirmed that in patients with PVFM, inspiratory spirometric values play a role in diagnosis. Additionally, the majority of the PVFM subjects showed vocal fold closure following a speech utterance while the control group did not – a finding that warrants further investigation. Dr. Thomas Murry disorder is an abnormal closing of the airway with the vocal folds when somebody inhales,” explains Dr. Murry. “When we take a breath in, our vocal folds are supposed to be wide open. But when patients who have PVFM take a breath in, their vocal folds start to close. The paradox is that the vocal folds are closing when they should stay open.” Treatment involves respiratory retraining – a series of increased resistance breathing exercises based on the rhythm of breathing and the manner of breathing – and outcomes reviewed on a case-by-case basis are showing success. “Once patients can maintain that rhythm of breathing by not holding their breath and by not taking big breaths, we start to increase the resistance – first by putting them on a bicycle, then by having them climb steps and, eventually, we have them run. Through this combination of behavior modification and physical training, breathing starts to improve within four to eight visits.” Dr. Murry, who sees about 50 people a year, primary ages 12 to 25, with this unusual condition, notes that it often begins after an upper respiratory infection and can develop into a significant quality of life issue, causing shortness of breath and difficulty breathing upon exertion, including during speaking. Some patients are hypersensitive to certain odors. The smell of diesel or certain foods may be a trigger, profoundly affecting the ability of patients to maintain an open airway. Dr. Murry and his colleagues continue to raise questions worthy of research, including determining how often the condition occurs and whether cases can resolve without treatment. In young people with this disorder, the most common misdiagnosis is exercise-induced 10 Clinical Innovation: A New Tool to Test for Allergies T he work of William R. Reisacher, MD, is “nothing to sneeze at.” Dr. Reisacher is developing a diagnostic strategy for nonallergic rhinitis in which individuals appear to have classic allergic symptoms but whose skin and blood tests are negative. “The cause of the symptoms remains unclear,” says Dr. Reisacher. “What’s been known for many years is that the lining of the nose, and some of the other tissues inside the mouth and the throat, are able to produce all of the allergy antibodies that they need right in that area. Many people will have those antibodies in a local environment, such as in the nasal cavity, but they’re not going to have any evidence for it in the blood or in the skin.” Local antibodies have been found to play a role not only in non-allergic rhinitis, but in many other conditions, such as nasal polyps, allergic fungal sinusitis, and chronic rhinosinusitis. “These patients look like they have allergies, but some estimates suggest that 45 to 50 percent of those patients who test negative will have allergy antibodies in their nose,” notes Dr. Reisacher. “So the ability to test for these antigen-specific antibodies is of primary importance not only for establishing the correct diagnosis, but also to open up other avenues of treatment.” Dr. William R. Reisacher a cytology brush to collect both mucus and surface epithelial cells of the nasal lining, he then processed those cells in a salt water solution, testing them for antibodies using blood serum testing equipment recalibrated for saline. That first study was a landmark proof of concept that antigen-specific antibodies inside the nose could be measured using the brush biopsy. Dr. Reisacher then embarked on additional studies using the mucosal brush biopsy on oral cavity mucosa to see if it might represent a novel, non-invasive testing method for people with food allergies, demonstrating that the brush biopsy – especially when taken from the vestibule – correlated much better with clinical symptoms then blood testing. To date, testing for local antibodies has involved invasive and difficult procedures. The thrust of Dr. Reisacher’s research was to find a less invasive way of testing for local antibodies. “I used what I call a mucosal brush biopsy,” explains Dr. Reisacher. Using “I would say that almost everybody who has allergies has antibodies in the local area,” says Dr. Reisacher. “What’s interesting is that the patients who don’t have antibodies elsewhere, and only have antibodies in the local area, those people tend to be missed. So it’s important to not only do systemic testing, but local testing as well.” Dr. Reisacher’s invention of the mucosal brush biopsy represents a less invasive form of testing that may appeal to more people who are concerned about allergies, but it also has implications in sinonasal research and any research where patients are categorized based on their allergic status. 11 12 Academic Highlights News and Notes 14 Selected Publications 16 Residency Update20 Professional Education20 Department Faculty 13 22 News and Notes By Invitation Only and as a panelist at the Sixth International Conference on Acoustic Neuroma and Other Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors, Los Angeles. Faculty of the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery are frequently invited around the world to serve as visiting professors or share their expertise at meetings held by professional societies and organizations. Following are a selection of some recent speaking engagements – here and abroad. Michael G. Stewart, MD, MPH, was visiting professor and keynote speaker at resident graduations at Georgia Health Sciences University, Johns Hopkins University, Vanderbilt University, and the University of Iowa; visiting professor at Georgetown University and Baylor College of Medicine; invited speaker at the Washington Metro Otolaryngology Society, Salzburg Weill Cornell Seminar, Salzburg, Austria, and OMI Otolaryngology Seminar, Pavlov State Medical University, St. Petersburg, Russia; and Guest of Honor, Annual Rhinology and Advanced Sinus Surgery course, Department of Otolaryngology, Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China. Ashutosh Kacker, MBBS, was invited to participate in panel discussions on sleep apnea at The Triological Society Annual Meeting in San Diego, and skull base surgery at the Summer Sinus Course of the American Rhinologic Society in Chicago; the 2012 American Austrian Foundation Otolaryngology Update in Salzburg, Austria; and the 10th International Congress of Otorhinolaryngology Head & Neck Surgery in Ankara, Turkey. David I. Kutler, MD, served as a member of the faculty of the 2011 American Austrian Foundation Otolaryngology Update in Salzburg, Austria, and the 2011 Otolaryngology Satellite Course in St. Petersburg, Russia. Lucian Sulica, MD, was an invited speaker at the International Voice Symposium at New York University, the Robotic and Laser Surgery in Otolaryngology course in Hackensack, NJ, and the keynote speaker at the Australia-Asia-Pacific Laryngology & Dysphagia Conference in Melbourne, Australia; and was the Elbyrne Gill lecturer at the Virginia Society of OtolaryngologyHead & Neck Surgery Annual Meeting. Joseph J. Montano, EdD, spoke on PatientCentered Care: Fact, Fiction or Fluff at the Ida Institute Seminar 6A, in Skodsborg, Denmark. Thomas Murry, PhD, served as a visiting professor at the University of South Florida, Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, Orlando; the Santa Clara University, Department of Bioengineering, Santa Clara, California; and the University of Hong Kong, Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences. Honors and Awards Ashutosh Kacker, MBBS, received an Honor Award from the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. David I. Kutler, MD, was inducted as a Fellow in The Triological Society. Vikash K. Modi, MD, was awarded the Malcolm Schvey Clinical Teaching Award in June 2012 from Weill Cornell Medical College. Vikash K. Modi, MD, was an invited participant at the European Society of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology meeting in Amsterdam. Joseph J. Montano, EdD, received a Service Recognition Award from the Hearing Loss Association of America – the nation’s leading organization representing people with hearing loss. Samuel H. Selesnick, MD, was an invited speaker at the Politzer Society of Otology and Neurotology in Athens, Greece, at both the University of Colorado and Vanderbilt University meetings in Vail, and at The New York Clinical Society in New York. Dr. Selesnick also served as a visiting professor at the University of Cincinnati and the Medical University of South Carolina; William R. Reisacher, MD, was an Honor Award recipient of the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. 14 Samuel H. Selesnick, MD, was presented with the Vice Presidential Citation by The Triological Society in recognition of outstanding contributions to the Society. Michael G. Stewart, MD, MPH Vice Dean, Weill Cornell Medical College Board of Directors, American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Council Member and Vice President, Eastern Section, The American Laryngological, Rhinological, and Otological Society Consultant to Board of Directors, American Rhinologic Society President, Association of Academic Departments of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Board of Directors, American Board of Otolaryngology Course Director, Otolaryngology Symposium, Salzburg, Austria Michael G. Stewart, MD, MPH, received the 2012 Distinguished Service Award (2nd award) from the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, and was inducted into the Alumni Hall of Honors of St. Xavier High School, Louisville, KY. Leadership Appointments David I. Kutler, MD President, New York Head and Neck Society Kate E. McCarn, MD Educational Committee, American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Task Force, New Materials, American Board of Otolaryngology Editorial Appointments Kevin D. Brown, MD, PhD Editorial Board, Otology and Neurotology Joseph J. Montano, EdD Board of Trustees, Hearing Loss Association of America Ashutosh Kacker, MBBS Editorial Boards: The Laryngoscope; American Journal of Rhinology Thomas Murry, PhD Advisory Board, Pan-European Voice Conference Thomas Murry, PhD Editor, Voice and Communication Sciences, Plural Publishing Editorial Consultant Board, Journal of Medical Speech-Language Pathology Editorial Consultant, Journal of Voice Editorial Reviewer and Consultant, Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Mukesh Prasad, MD Chairman, Clinical Affairs Subcommittee of the General Faculty Council, Weill Cornell Medical College William R. Reisacher, MD Board of Directors, American Academy of Otolaryngic Allergy Samuel H. Selesnick, MD Editorial Board, Otology and Neurotology Editorial Review Panel Member, Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Samuel H. Selesnick, MD Chair, Subspecialty Advisory Council, American Academy of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery Chairman, Nominating Committee, Council of Scientific Trustees, Hearing Health Foundation Chairman, Committee on Applicants, Manhattan District #2, American College of Surgeons Secretary-Treasurer, Board of Directors, Otology and Neurotology Incorporated (parent corporation of the journal Otology & Neurotology) Executive Council Member, American Neurotology Society Executive Council Member, American Otological Society Senior Examiner, American Board of Otolaryngology Michael G. Stewart, MD, MPH Editor-in-Chief, The Laryngoscope Lucian Sulica, MD Editorial Board, The Laryngoscope 15 Selected Publications – 2011-2013 Peer-Reviewed Articles Jilani OK, Singh P, Wernicke AG, Kutler DI, Kuhel WI, Christos P, Nori D, Sabbas A, Chao KS, Parashar B. Radiation therapy is well tolerated and produces excellent control rates in elderly patients with locally advanced head and neck cancers. Journal of Geriatric Oncology. Vol. 3, Issue 4, October 2012, 337-43. Stucken EZ, Brown KD, Selesnick SH. The use of KTP laser in revision stapedectomy. Otology & Neurotology. 2012 Oct;33(8):1297-99. Stucken EZ, Brown KD, Selesnick SH. Clinical and diagnostic evaluation of acoustic neuromas. Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America. 2012 Apr;45(2):269-84. Kaplan KA, Reiffel AJ, Kutler DI, Rohde CH, Spector JA. Sequential second free flap for head and neck reconstruction in a patient with fanconi anemia and metachronous squamous cell carcinoma. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. 2011 Jul;128(1):18e-9e. Cohen MA, Mirza N, Dow K, Abboud SK. Presentation and publication rates among women and men at AAO-HNS Meetings. ORL: Journal for Otorhinolaryngology and Its Related Specialties. 2013 Jan 5; 74(6):325-29. Kutler DI, Crummey AD, Kuhel WI. Routine central compartment lymph node dissection for patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma. Head & Neck. 2012 Feb;34(2):260-63. Leibowitz J, Cohen MA, Hashmi N, Mirza N, Abboud S. Extramedullary plasmacytoma of the nasopharynx treated with surgery and adjuvant radiation: case report and review of the literature. The Internet Journal of Otorhinolaryngology. 2011;12(2). Parashar B, Wernicke AG, Pavese A, Singh P, Trichter S, Sabbas A, Kutler DI, Kuhel WI, Port JL, Lee PC, Nori D, Chao KS. Cesium-131 permanent seed brachytherapy: dosimetric evaluation and radiation exposure to surgeons, radiation oncologists, and staff. Brachytherapy. 2011 Nov-Dec;10(6):508-13. Quon H, Cohen MA, Montone KT, Ziober AF, Wang LP, Weinstein GS, O’Malley BW Jr. Transoral robotic surgery and adjuvant therapy for oropharyngeal carcinomas and the influence of p16(INK4a) on treatment outcomes. The Laryngoscope. 2011 Jul 20. [Epub ahead of print] Reiffel AJ, Rohde CH, Kutler DI, Spector JA. Sequential second free fibula flap for the reconstruction of metachronous osteoradionecrosis of the mandible. Journal of Craniofacial Surgery. 2012 Mar;23(2):e90-91. Liotta D, Kacker A, Schwartz TH, Anand A. Endoscopic management of juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma. Operative Techniques in Otolaryngology. Vol. 22, No. 4, Dec 2011;281-84. Stucken EZ, Kutler DI, Moquete R, Kazam E, Kuhel WI. Localization of small parathyroid adenomas using modified 4-dimensional computed tomography/ ultrasound. Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. 2012 Jan;146(1):33-39. Sugumaran M, Cohen JC, Kacker A. Prevalence of over-the-counter and complementary medication use in the otolaryngology preoperative patient: a patient safety initiative. The Laryngoscope. 2012 Jul;122(7):1489-92. McCarn KE, Hilger PA. 3D analysis of tissue expanders. Facial Plastic Surgery Clinics of North America. 2011 Nov;19(4):759-65. Tabaee A, Hsu AK, Kacker A. Indications, technique, safety, and accuracy of office-based nasal endoscopy with biopsy for sinonasal neoplasm. International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology. 2011 May-Jun;1(3): 225-28. Thai L, McCarn KE, Stott W, Watts T, Wax MK, Andersen PE, Gross ND. Venous thromboembolism in patients with head and neck cancer after surgery. Head & Neck. 2013 Jan;35(1):4-9. Gerber ME, Modi VK, Ward RF, Gower VM, Thomsen J. Endoscopic posterior cricoid split and costal cartilage graft placement in children. Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. 2013 Jan 10. [Epub ahead of print] Tang S, Kacker A. Should intranasal splints be used after nasal septal surgery? The Laryngoscope. 2012 Aug;122(8):1647-48. Wang AS, Stater BJ, Kacker A. Intratonsillar abscess: 3 case reports and a review of the literature. International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology. 2013 Jan 30. [Epub ahead of print] Hom S, Modi V, Chandran L, Kier C. Stridor in the neonate. Contemporary Pediatrics. Feb 2012; 42-47. Kier C, Balluz R, Modi V, Chandran L. Visual diagnosis: respiratory distress: a great masquerader. Pediatrics in Review. Oct 2011. 32:e95-e101. Birkeland AC, Auerbach AD, Sanborn E, Parashar B, Kuhel WI, Chandrasekharappa SC, Smogorzewska A, Kutler DI. Postoperative clinical radiosensitivity in patients with fanconi anemia and head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. Archives of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. 2011 Sep;137(9):930-34. Modi VK. Endoscopic posterior cricoid split with rib grafting. Advances in Oto-rhino-laryngology. 2012;73:116-22. Modi VK. Vocal cordotomy. Advances in Oto-rhinolaryngology. 2012;73:123-26. Yang GC, Scognamiglio T, Kuhel WI. Fine-needle aspiration of mucin-producing thyroid tumors. Acta Cytologica. 2011;55(6):549-55. 16 Murry T, Cukier-Blaj S, Kelleher A, Malki KH. Laryngeal and respiratory patterns in patients with paradoxical vocal fold motion. Respiratory Medicine. 2011 Dec;105(12):1891-95. Modi VK. Vocal fold injection medialization laryngoplasty. Advances in Oto-rhino-laryngology. 2012;73:90-94. Oomen KP, Modi VK, Stewart MG. Evidence-based practice: pediatric tonsillectomy. Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America. 2012 Oct;45(5):1071-81. Ricci-Maccarini A, De Maio V, Murry T, Schindler A. Development and validation of the Children’s Voice Handicap Index-10 (CVHI-10). Journal of Voice. 2012 Dec 17. [Epub ahead of print] Montano JJ, Al Makadma H. The communication rings: a tool for exploring the social networks of individuals with hearing loss. Seminars in Hearing. 2012. 33(1),46-52. Rickert SM, Childs LF, Carey BT, Murry T, Sulica L. Laryngeal electromyography for prognosis of vocal fold palsy: a meta-analysis. The Laryngoscope. 2012 Jan;122(1):158-61. Montano JJ. Future trends in aural rehabilitation. ENT and Audiology. 2011. 20(4), 90-92. Conley D, Pearlman A, Zhou K, Chandra R, Kern R. The role of point-of-care CT in the management of chronic rhinosinusitis: a case-control study. Ear, Nose & Throat Journal. 2011 Aug;90(8):376-81. Stachler RJ, Chandrasekhar SS, Archer SM, Rosenfeld RM, Schwartz SR, Barrs DM, Brown SR, Fife TD, Ford P, Ganiats TG, Hollingsworth DB, Lewandowski CA, Montano JJ, Saunders JE, Tucci DL, Valente M, Warren BE, Yaremchuk KL, Robertson PJ; American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. Clinical practice guideline: sudden hearing loss. Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. 2012 Mar;146(3 Suppl):S1-35. Cohen J, Reisacher WR, Sulica L. Severe systemic reaction from calcium hydroxylapatite vocal cord filler. The Laryngoscope. 2012. [In press] Hsu NM, Reisacher WR. A comparison of attrition rates in patients undergoing sublingual immunotherapy vs subcutaneous immunotherapy. International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology. 2012 Jul-Aug;2(4):280-84. Cannito MP, Doiuchi M, Murry T, Woodson GE. Perceptual structure of adductor spasmodic dysphonia and its acoustic correlates. Journal of Voice. 2012 Nov;26(6):818.e5-13. Jourdy DN, Reisacher WR. Factors affecting time required to reach maintenance dose during subcutaneous immunotherapy. International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology. 2012 Jul-Aug;2(4):294-99. Childs L, Rickert S, Murry T, Blitzer A, Sulica L. Patient perceptions of factors leading to spasmodic dysphonia: a combined clinical experience of 350 patients. The Laryngoscope. 2011 Oct;121(10):2195-98. Kohlberg G, Reisacher WR. Pathology Quiz Case: pleomorphic adenoma of the nasal septum. Archives of Otolaryngolgy-Head & Neck Surgery. 2012. [In press] Freeman E, Woo P, Saxman JH, Murry T. A comparison of sung and spoken phonation onset gestures using high-speed digital imaging. Journal of Voice. 2012 Mar;26(2):226-38. Purkey MT, Smith TL, Ferguson BJ, Luong A, Reisacher WR, Pillsbury HC 3rd, Toskala E. Subcutaneous immunotherapy for allergic rhinitis: an evidence based review of the recent literature with recommendations. International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology. 2013 Jan 11. [Epub ahead of print] Hassan SM, Malki KH, Mesallam TA, Farahat M, Bukhari M, Murry T. The effect of cochlear implantation and post-operative rehabilitation on acoustic voice analysis in post-lingual hearing impaired adults. European Archives of Otorhinolaryngology. 2011 Oct;268(10):1437-42. Reisacher WR. Detecting local immunoglobulin E from mucosal brush biopsy of the inferior turbinates using microarray analysis. International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology. 2012 Nov 7. [Epub ahead of print] Hassan SM, Malki KH, Mesallam TA, Farahat M, Bukhari M, Murry T. The effect of cochlear implantation on nasalance of speech in postlingually hearing-impaired adults. Journal of Voice. 2012 Sep;26(5):669.e17-22. Reisacher WR. Mucosal brush biopsy testing of the inferior turbinate to detect local, antigen-specific immunoglobulin E. International Forum of Allergy & Rhinology. 2012 Jan-Feb;2(1):69-74. Hatzelis V, Murry T. Paradoxical vocal fold motion: respiratory retraining to manage long-term symptoms. Jornal da Sociedade Brasileira de Fonoaudiologia. 2012;24(1):80-85. Reisacher WR, Demask C, Calhoun K, Veling M. Food allergy: state of the science – allergy, asthma and immunology committee. Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. 2011;145(5):713-16. Helidoni M, Murry T, Chlouverakis G, Okalidou A, Velegrakis G. Voice risk factors in kindergarten teachers in Greece. Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica. 2012 Sep 28;64(5):211-16. Reisacher WR, Liotta D, Yazdi S, Putnam D. Desensitizing mice to ovalbumin through subcutaneous microsphere immunotherapy (SMITH). International Forum of Allergy and Rhinology. 2011 Sep-Oct;1(5):390-95. 17 Reisacher WR, Wang A. Novel strategies for allergy immunotherapy. Current Otorhinolaryngology Reports. 2013. [In press] Carey B, Sulica L, Wu A, Branski R. A novel electrodiagnostic assessment of the laryngeal closure reflex. Muscle & Nerve. 2012 Aug 3. [Epub ahead of print] Martins OF, Victor JD, Selesnick SH. The relationship between individual ossicular status and conductive hearing loss in cholesteatoma. Otology & Neurotology. 2012 Apr;33(3):387-92. Dräger DL, Branski RC, Wree A, Sulica L. Friedrich Berthold Reinke (1862-1919): anatomist of the vocal fold. Journal of Voice. 2011 May;25(3):301-7. Simpson CB, Sulica L, Postma GN, Rosen CA, Amin MR, Merati AL, Courey MS, Patel V, Johns MM 3rd. Idiopathic ulcerative laryngitis. The Laryngoscope. 2011 May;121(5):1023-26. Mehra S, Morris LG, Shah J, Bilsky M, Selesnick SH, Kraus DH. Outcomes of temporal bone resection for locally advanced parotid cancer. Skull Base. 2011 November; 21(6): 389-96. Sinclair CF, Sulica L. Idiopathic ulcerative laryngitis causing midmembranous vocal fold granuloma. The Laryngoscope. 2012 Sep 18. [Epub ahead of print] Morris LGT, Mehra S, Shah JP, Bilsky MH, Selesnick SH, Kraus DH. Predictors of survival and recurrence after temporal bone resection for cancer. Head & Neck. 2012 Sep;34(9):1231-39. Sugumaran M, Sulica L, Branski RC. Reinke’s edema finding on positron emission tomography. Archives of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. 2011 Jun;137(6):620-21. Stucken EZ, Selesnick SH, Brown KD. The role of obesity in spontaneous temporal bone encephaloceles and CSF leak. Otology & Neurotology. 2012 Oct;33(8):1412-17. Sulica L. Hoarseness. Archives of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. 2011 Jun;137(6):616-19. Bezerra TF, Padua FG, Pilan RR, Stewart MG, Voegels RL. Cross-cultural adaptation and validation of a quality of life questionnaire: the Nasal Obstruction Symptom Evaluation questionnaire. Rhinology. 2011 Jun;49(2):227-31. Sulica L. Laryngoscopy, stroboscopy and other tools for the evaluation of voice disorders. Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America. 2013 Feb;46(1):21-30. Young VN, Smith LJ, Sulica L, Krishna P, Rosen CA. Patient tolerance of awake, in-office laryngeal procedures: a multi-institutional perspective. The Laryngoscope. 2012 Feb;122(2):315-21. Bezerra TF, Stewart MG, Fornazieri MA, Pilan RR, Pinna Fde R, Padua FG, Voegels RL. Quality of life assessment septoplasty in patients with nasal obstruction. Brazilian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology. 2012 Jun;78(3):57-62. Textbooks Rudmik L, Soler ZM, Orlandi RR, Stewart MG, Bhattacharyya N, Kennedy DW, Smith TL. Early postoperative care following endoscopic sinus surgery: an evidence-based review with recommendations. International Forum of Allergy and Rhinology. 2011 Nov-Dec;1(6):417-30. Montano J, Spitzer J (Eds). Adult Audiologic Rehabilitation. 2nd Edition. San Diego: Plural Publications. 2013. Murray T, Carrau R. Clinical Management of Swallowing Disorders. 3rd Edition. San Diego: Plural Publications. 2012. Stewart MG. Summarizing the evidence. The Laryngoscope. 2012 Jan;122(1):2. Stewart MG, Chandra R, Chiu A, Hanna E, Kennedy D, Kraus D, Gleeson M, Levine P, Niparko J, O’Malley B Jr, Rosenfeld R, Ruben R, Sataloff R, Smith R, Weber P. The value of resident presentations at scientific meetings. The Laryngoscope. 2013 Jan;123(1):1. Book Chapters Brown KD, Banuchi V, Selesnick SH. Congenital Disorders of the Middle Ear. In: Current Diagnosis and Treatment in Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery. 3rd Edition. Lalwani A (Ed). New York: McGrawHill. 2011:661-73. Walton J, Ebner Y, Stewart MG, April MM. Systematic review of complications of tonsillotomy versus tonsillectomy. Otolaryngology – Head Neck Surgery. 2012 Dec;147(6):1164; author reply 1164-65. Walton J, Ebner Y, Stewart MG, April MM. Systematic review of randomized controlled trials comparing intracapsular tonsillectomy with total tonsillectomy in a pediatric population. Archives of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. 2012 Mar;138(3):243-49. Brown KD, Banuchi V, Selesnick SH. Diseases of the External Ear. In: Current Diagnosis and Treatment in Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery. 3rd Edition. Lalwani A (Ed). New York: McGraw-Hill. 2011:645-60. Welling DB, Stewart MG. Minimal reporting standard for reporting hearing outcomes. The Laryngoscope. 2012 Dec 16. [Epub ahead of print] Tang S, Brown KD, Selesnick SH. Complication of Otitis Media. In: Clinical Otology. Myles P (Ed). [In press] 18 Reisacher WR, Stucken E. Nasal Immunity. In: Textbook of Otolaryngology. Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2012. Cohen MA, Goldstein DP, Gullane PJ. Salvage Surgery for Head and Neck Cancer. In: Encyclopedia of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery. 1st Edition. Kountakis SE (Ed). Springer Publishing. 2014. [In press] Reisacher WR, Mehra S. Olfaction and Taste Disorders. In: Textbook of Otolaryngology. Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2013. Cohen MA, Gilbert RW. Skull Base Reconstruction. In: Textbook of Head and Neck Surgery and Oncology. Stell and Maran’s 5th Edition. Watkinson J and Gilbert RW (Eds). Oxford University Press. 2011. [In press] Song PC, Sulica L, Meyer TK. Spasmodic Dysphonia. In: Botulinum Neurotoxin for Head and Neck Disorders. Blitzer A, Benson B and Guss J (Eds). New York: Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2012:49-72. Cohen MA, Goldstein DP, Nassif R, Gilbert RW, Gullane PJ. Recurrent Laryngeal Cancer. In: Recurrent Cancer of the Head and Neck. 1st Edition. Mehanna H and Ang KK (Eds). 2011. [In press] Stewart MG. Evidence-based Medicine in Rhinology and Skull Base Surgery. In: Rhinology: Diseases of the Nose, Sinuses, and Skull Base. Kennedy DW and Hwang PH (Eds). New York: Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2012. Modi VK. Vocal Fold Injection Medialization Laryngoplasty. In: Pediatric Airway Surgery. Advances in Oto-Rhino-Laryngology. Hartnick CJ, Hansen MC, and Gallagher TQ (Eds). Basel, Karger. 2012, Vol. 73, pp 90-94. Stewart MG. Epidemiology/Changes in Trauma Patterns. In: Head and Neck Trauma. Goldberg AN, Murr AH, and Lee C (Eds). New York: Informa Publishers. [In press] Modi VK. Endoscopic Posterior Cricoid Split with Rib Grafting. In: Pediatric Airway Surgery. Advances in Oto-Rhino-Laryngology. Hartnick CJ, Hansen MC, and Gallagher TQ (Eds). Basel, Karger, 2012, Vol. 73, pp 116-22. Stewart MG. Outcomes Research and Evidencebased Medicine. In: Bailey’s Head and Neck SurgeryOtolaryngology. 5th Edition. Johnson J and Rosen C (Eds). Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. [In press] Modi VK. Vocal Cordotomy. In: Pediatric Airway Surgery. Advances in Oto-Rhino-Laryngology. Hartnick CJ, Hansen MC, and Gallagher TQ (Eds). Basel, Karger. 2012, Vol 73, pp 123-26. Stewart MG. Penetrating Trauma of the Head and Neck. In: Bailey’s Head and Neck Surgery – Otolaryngology. 5th Edition. Johnson J and Rosen C (Eds). Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. [In press] Modi VK, Ward RF, April MM. Congenital Malformations of the Nose, Nasopharynx, and Sinuses. In: Pediatric Otolaryngology: Principles and Practice Pathways. 2nd Edition. Wetmore RF, Muntz HR and McGill TJ (Eds). New York, NY: Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2012, pp 410-21. Sulica L. Laryngeal Electromyography. In: Recent Advances in Otolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery. Lalwani AK and Pfister MHF (Eds). New Delhi: Jaypee Medical Press. 2012:125-39. Montano J. Defining Audiologic Rehabilitation. In: Adult Audiologic Rehabilitation. 2nd Edition. Montano J and Spitzer J (Eds). San Diego: Plural Publishing. 2013. Sulica L. Voice: Anatomy, Physiology and Clinical Evaluation. In: Otolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery, 5th Edition. Johnson J and Rosen C (Eds). [In press] Sulica L. Diagnosis and Management of Vocal Fold Paralysis and Paresis. Treatise on Laryngology, Voice and Swallowing. Caracas: Amolca Editores. [In press] Montano J. Overdependence on Technology in the Management of Hearing Loss. In: Translational Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology. Goldfarb R (Ed). San Diego: Plural Publishing. 2012. Sulica L, Blitzer A, Meyer T, Guardiani L. Laryngeal Electromyography. In: Diagnosis and Treatment of Voice Disorders. 4th Edition. Rubin J, Sataloff RT and Korovin G (Eds). San Diego: Singular Publications Group, Inc. [In press] Preminger J, Montano J. Incorporation Communication Partners into the AR Process. In: Adult Audiologic Rehabilitation. 2nd Edition. Montano J and Spitzer J (Eds). San Diego: Plural Publishing. 2013. Pearlman AN, Stewart MG. Frontal Sinus Obliteration and Cranialization. In: Rhinology and Endoscopic Skull Base Surgery. Devaiah AL and Marple B (Eds). New York: Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. [In press] Reisacher WR. Setting Up the Office for Allergy. In: Allergy in ENT Practice. Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2012. 19 Residency Update C ombining the resources of Weill Cornell Medical College and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, the joint Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Residency Training Program provides outstanding opportunities in clinical care, research, and academic medicine. 2011-2012 Teaching Awards The Maxwell Abramson Teaching and Service Award Jayde Steckowych, MD Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons The Malcolm Schvey Clinical Teaching Award Vikash K. Modi, MD Weill Cornell Medical College The W. Shain Schley Resident Teaching Award Saral Mehra, MD PGY-5 2012 Resident Graduates 2012-2013 New Residents Alyn Kim, MD Alison Maresh, MD Jin Suk Calvin Kim, MD Valeria Silva Merea, MD Saral Mehra, MD, MBA Roheen Raithatha, MD David J. Phillips, MD Oscar Trujillo, MD Further Training Jin Suk Calvin Kim, MD Perelman School of Medicine at University of Pennsylvania Alyn Kim, MD – Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Toronto, Canada Valeria Silva Merea, MD Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons Alison Maresh, MD – Pediatric Otolaryngology, Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC David J. Phillips, MD Weill Cornell Medical College Saral Mehra, MD, MBA – Head and Neck Surgery and Microvascular Reconstruction, Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, NY Oscar Trujillo, MD University of Maryland School of Medicine Roheen Raithatha, MD – Advanced Rhinology and Endoscopic Skull Base Surgery, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York, NY 2012 Professional Education Presen ted b y Wei Nove I mber Weill C n November 2012, Weill Cornell faculty collaborated with faculty from New York University School of Medicine and Albert Einstein College of Medicine to present the New York Advanced Rhinology and Sinus Surgery Course. The two-day comprehensive CME program featured distinguished guest faculty Seth Brown, MD, Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Surgery, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, and Brent Senior, MD, Professor and ornell 14.5 AM Course Michae A PR Directo A Ca rs: Medic tegory 1 Cred l G. Profe ssor and Stewar Depa Chairman t, MD, rtme MPH Vice Dean nt of Otola ryngology Sr. Asso of Weill - Head Cornell ciate & Neck Medical Dean for Clini Surgery Colle Vijay ge cal Affai rs Clinical K. Anand, Profe MD ssor, Weill Otola Cornell ryngology Medical - Head Colle Richar ge & Neck d Leb Asso Surgery owitz, ciate Residenc Professor MD Vice Chai y Program Direc r for Depa rtment Academic tor Affairs of Otola NYU Lang one Med ryngology ical Cent Alexis er H. Assis tant ProfeJackma n, MD Depa ssor rtment Albert of Otor Eins hinolaryn Montefior tein Colle golog ge of ye Med ical Cent Medicine Head & Neck er Surgery Faculty : Weill Corne Ashuto sh ll Me dic al Co Kacker, llege ciate Profe ssor of MD, BS Otola ryngology Pea tant Proferlman, MD ssor of Otola ryngology Prasad ciate , MD Profe ssor of Clinical William Otola Rei ryng Assis ology tant Profe sacher, MD ssor of Otola Madelei ryngology ne R. Assis tant Schabe Rhinology Professor of Otola rg, MD, The New and Skul ryngology MPH lbase York - Head Eye and Surgery & Neck Theodo Ear Infirm Surgery ary re H.S Profe chw ssor of Neurologi artz, MD cal Surg New ery Yor Asso Aaron Assis ll Cor 9-10, al Col lege it(s)™ Friday Nov nell M edica l Colle 2012 • 1305 York ge, M • New Avenu e • New onte fiore, NYU York C York, ember 7:30 – 8:00 9, 201 2 Registra SESSION tion & 1 Mod breakfas erator: – 8:45 t Dr. Stew Defining art – 9:30 CRS 9:30 in 2012 Case – 10:0 pres — Drs. 0 10:00 Stew Managem entations: – 10:3 art, Jack Expert ent of 0 man, managem BREAK SESSION sinus-ar Senior, ent: simp ea head Lebo 2 Mod witz 10:30 ache erator: le to – 11:0 s — Dr. complex Dr. Jack 0 11:00 Grosberg State — Drs. man – 11:3 of the Anand, 0 art in 11:30 Antibiot Fried allergy – 12:0 , Setz ics 0 en, Sen 2012 12:00 Complian in chronic — Dr. ior – 1:00 Reisache rhinosin ce, billin Lunch SESSION usitis r g, and – wha coding 3 Mod t’s the 1:00 erator: update evidence – 1:30 Dr. 2012 ? — Dr. 1:30 — Dr. Managem Lebowitz – 2:00 Setzen Senior ent of 2:00 Quality failed – 2:30 surgery of life 2:30 and outc Role — – 5:00 Drs. of topi omes Stew cal ther art, Ana asse DISS ssment apy in ECT nd, Setz for end ION LAB CRS — Dr. en, Jack — Drs. : basi osco Stew Saturd man pic surg c diss art Lebo ay Nov witz, ery — ection – Pras ember ethm 7:30 Dr. Ana oid, max ad, Brown – 8:00 nd 10, 201 illary, SESSION Registra 2 frontal, 1 Mod tion & sphe 8:00 – noid erator: breakfas 8:45 sinus Dr. t anatomy 8:45 Managem Anand – 9:15 review ent of Epistaxis CSF 9:15 – 9:45 managem leaks — Drs. 9:45 Imag Anand, ent — – 10:3 e-guidan Lebowitz, Dr. Jack 0 10:30 ce: tech Advance man Scha – 11:0 berg nolo d ESS 0 , Sen gy & BREAK (DCR, SESSION ior, Jaco indicatio optic bs ns — 2 Mod nerve, 11:00 Dr. Taba erator: orbit, – 11:3 ee Dr. Setz etc.) 0 11:30 — Drs. 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Mukesh Asso David Kam k Un iversit y Sch ool of Clinical elha Depa Associate r, MD rtment Profe ssor of Med icine Michae Clinical l Setzen Asso ciate , MD Depa Profe rtment ssor of Otola ryngology Jos Profe eph Jac ssor, 20 obs, Depa rtment M.D. Medic ine of Otola Albert ryngology Einste d Room day cour in Co in-de s, New Marvin se prov pth infor llege York, ides the P. mation rhino NY 1002 Profe of Me sinus ssor andFried, MD practicing on 1 dicine Depa laborator itis. 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All confl All spea ce, ant finan and staff hip infor icts of North , Allergy, kers, discu mem of of this matio cial relat interest ssion bers parti Carolina and Endo activ of (1) are reso n is analy ionsh scop devic Scho cipating off-label ity. Presente es or lved prior zed to dete ips perta ol of Med ic Skull in (2) prod Base or rs ining rmine icine, to parti Surg ucts or investigational and authors WCM Chap whether to their C CME el Hill, ery devic are also cipation in uses es not NC the plann conflicts activities have yet appr of FDA appr expected any ing or are inten to discl oved oved anonymouconcerns, ded to comm ose any in the ercial Unite be sly expr please call d State products the Offic evidenceess them s. or e of Cont based and . free of inuing Medical comm ercial Educ bias. ation If you at 212746-2631 to Faculty and Residents with Visiting Professor Roland (Ron) D. Eavey, MD (front row, third from left), from Vanderbilt University 2012 – 12th Annual Residents Research Day First Prize Saral Mehra, MD, MBA PGY-5 Factors Predictive of Voice and Swallowing Complaints Following Anterior Approaches to the Cervical Spine Third Prize Roheen Raithatha, MD PGY-5 Inter-Rater Agreement of Nasal Endoscopy for Chronic Rhinosinusitis Second Prize Jiovani Visaya, MD PGY-3 Histopathological Effects of Balloon Dilation in a Live Rabbit Model Named Lecture Program – 2012 Guest Faculty The Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery hosts distinguished physicians who come to Weill Cornell to share their expertise through our named lecture programs. In 2012, these included: Fifth Annual New York City Pediatric Airway Symposium Seth M. Pransky, MD Clinical Professor of Surgery University of California, San Diego Director, Pediatric Otolaryngology UC San Diego Health System James A. Moore Lecture Herman A. Jenkins, MD Professor and Chairman Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Save the Date Dr. Robert W. Selfe Lecture Ellen M. Friedman, MD, FAAP, FACS Professor and Dr. Bobby R. Alford Chair in Pediatric Otolaryngology Baylor College of Medicine Chief of Otolaryngology Service Texas Children’s Hospital Seventh Annual Otolaryngology Update October 24 - 25, 2013 New York City For more information, please call (212) 585-6800 or email [email protected]. 21 Department Faculty Michael G. Stewart, MD, MPH Vice Dean, Weill Cornell Medical College Professor and Chairman of Otolaryngology Professor of Public Health General Otolaryngology (646) 962-6673 Samuel H. Selesnick, MD Professor and Vice Chairman of Otolaryngology Professor of Otolaryngology in Neurological Surgery Professor of Otolaryngology in Neurology Otology/Neurotology (646) 962-3277 Kevin D. Brown, MD, PhD Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology Otology/Neurotology (646) 962-2032 Marc A. Cohen, MD Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery (646) 962-5346 Ashutosh Kacker, MBBS Associate Professor of Otolaryngology General Otolaryngology; Sinus/Skull Base Surgery (646) 962-5097 William I. Kuhel, MD Associate Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery (646) 962-6325 David I. Kutler, MD Associate Professor of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery (646) 962-4323 Joshua I. Levinger, MD Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology General Otolaryngology (646) 962-4451 Kate E. McCarn, MD Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (646) 962-2285 Vikash K. Modi, MD Anne Belcher, MD Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology in Pediatrics Pediatric Otolaryngology (646) 962-2224 Joseph J. Montano, EdD Associate Professor of Audiology in Clinical Otolaryngology Audiology, Chief of Hearing and Speech (646) 962-2231 22 Thomas Murry, PhD Professor of Speech-Language Pathology in Otolaryngology Speech Pathology (646) 962-5347 Aaron N. Pearlman, MD Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology General Otolaryngology; Sinus/Skull Base Surgery (646) 962-3169 Mukesh Prasad, MD Associate Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology General Otolaryngology (646) 962-2216 William R. Reisacher, MD Associate Professor of Otolaryngology General Otolaryngology; Otolaryngic Allergy (646) 962-2093 Rita M. Roure, MD Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology General Otolaryngology (646) 962-3681 W. Shain Schley, MD Associate Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology General Otolaryngology (212) 746-2223 Lucian Sulica, MD Associate Professor of Otolaryngology Voice and Laryngology (646) 962-7464 Maria V. Suurna, MD Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology General Otolaryngology (646) 962-9135 New Physician Appointment We are pleased to welcome our newest faculty member, Maria V. Suurna, MD, to the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. Dr. Suurna joins us from the New York University School of Medicine, where she was an assistant professor in the Department of Otolaryngology. Dr. Suurna brings training and expertise in the full range of otolaryngology – head and neck surgery, including chronic ear problems and surgery for thyroid disorders and head and neck tumors. She completed residency training at the University of Cincinnati, where she was the recipient of the Gerson Lowenthal Award for Outstanding Microsurgical Skills in Temporal Bone Dissection from the Cincinnati Society of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery and Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. Dr. Suurna received a master of science degree in biology followed by her medical degree from the University of Indiana School of Medicine. 23 © 2013 Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery at Weill Cornell Medical College. All rights reserved. Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Weill Greenberg Center 1305 York Avenue, 5th Floor New York, NY 10021 (646) 962-3681 cornellent.org Chairman’s Office Michael G. Stewart, MD, MPH (646) 962-4777 Center for the Performing Artist (646) 962-2787 Hearing and Speech Center (646) 962-2231 West Side Practice 2315 Broadway, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10024 (646) 962-3686 W eill Cornell Medical College, Cornell University’s medical school located in New York City, is committed to excellence in research, teaching, patient care, and the advancement of the art and science of medicine, locally, nationally, and globally. Physicians and scientists of Weill Cornell Medical College are engaged in cutting-edge research from bench to bedside, aimed at unlocking mysteries of the human body in health and sickness and toward developing new treatments and prevention strategies. In its commitment to global health and education, Weill Cornell has a strong presence in places such as Qatar, Tanzania, Haiti, Brazil, Austria, and Turkey. Through the historic Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar, the Medical College is the first in the U.S. to offer its MD degree overseas. Weill Cornell is the birthplace of many medical advances — including the development of the Pap test for cervical cancer, the synthesis of penicillin, the first successful embryo-biopsy pregnancy and birth in the U.S., the first clinical trial of gene therapy for Parkinson’s disease, and, most recently, the world’s first successful use of deep brain stimulation to treat a minimally conscious, brain-injured patient. Weill Cornell Medical College is affiliated with NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, where its faculty provides comprehensive patient care at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center. The Medical College is also affiliated with The Methodist Hospital in Houston, Texas. For more information, visit weill.cornell.edu. Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Weill Cornell Medical College Weill Greenberg Center 1305 York Avenue, 5th Floor New York, NY 10021