Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Archive — Page 1 of 4
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May 22, 2023
Project aims to improve ear disease diagnoses with objective machine learning techniques
A new project, funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) and led by Aaron Moberly, MD, and Metin Gurcan, PhD, professor and director of the Center for Biomedical Informatics and the Clinical Image Analysis Lab at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, aims to develop machine learning applications to analyze eardrum videos collected with a digital otoscope. -
April 25, 2023
COVID alters respiratory microbiota
COVID-19 infection alters the microbes of the upper respiratory tract for at least several weeks, and such disturbances could impact disease severity and be targets for therapeutic interventions. -
April 6, 2023
Research Staff Awards honor contributions to discovery
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October 20, 2022
Implanted stimulator used to treat vocal cord paralysis
Vanderbilt is the only place in the world that has an implantable bilateral pacemaker that can stimulate opening of both vocal folds in patients with bilateral vocal fold paralysis, allowing them to both breathe and speak. -
October 13, 2022
Research shows genetic link to moving to the beat of music
A genomic study of musicality conducted by Vanderbilt researchers identified 69 genetic variants associated with beat synchronization, meaning the ability to move in synchrony with the beat of music. -
September 15, 2022
Gifts bolster otolaryngology, Alzheimer’s disease programs
Herbert Christopher, a grateful Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery patient who received cochlear hearing implants from David Haynes, MD, has funded the training of otolaryngology fellows and leaders in Alzheimer’s disease care through several outright endowed gifts and additional gift planning with his estate. -
September 8, 2022
Study tests drug to illuminate cancer during surgery
A Vanderbilt study is testing drugs that provide a targeted fluorescent dye that clings to and illuminates cancer.