What's the difference between laryngological and laryngologist?
Laryngological
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to laryngology.
Example Sentences:
(1) The report covers the therapeutic results achieved after using cytostatic drugs in 104 patients treated at the 1st Oto-Rhino-Laryngological Univ.
(2) The equilibrium troubles occuring in connection with cervical locomotoric diseases and their otorhino-laryngologic relations have been studied in the ORL Department of National Institute of Rheumatism and Medical Hydrology.
(3) The article is aimed at laryngologists in general, not surgeons in particular, and has implications for laryngology (being a putative model of diagnostic procedures), physiology (what forces create epilaryngeal configurations?
(4) Percutaneous needle laryngeal electromyography was used in 22 patients with an established vocal cord palsy of non-laryngological cause.
(5) The instruments and technique presented are redesigns of ones used in laryngology for 30 years.
(6) On the basis of the relevant laryngological literature, as well as less well-known sources, the probability of this assumption, the particular symptoms, and the fulminant course of the disease are documented.
(7) The incidence of infections in other organs (abdominal, dermatological, laryngological and miscellaneous) remained virtually constant over the individual decades.
(8) The need for microscopic rhinoscopy is obvious to otolaryngologists who have used the operating microscope in otology and laryngology.
(9) Report of three cases of mucoepidermoid tumors with rare locations in laryngological areas (fundus of the tongue, retromolar trigonum, nasopharynx and sinuses).
(10) We report a case of a forty-three year old man presenting with multifocal bronchocentric granulomatosis which was revealed following some oto-rhino-laryngological and bronchopulmonary symptoms.
(12) Medical and laryngological examinations were done several times in 125 workers of the Maritime Merchant Haven in GdaĆsk overloading phosphates, apatites, and crystalline sulphur compounds.
(13) At the 1976 Southern Sectional Meeting of American Laryngological, Rhinological and Otological Society, Inc., a color movie presenting two cases on the "diagnosis and treatment of glomus jugulare tumors of the middle ear and mastoid" was shown.
(14) We describe a familial series in which both otologic and laryngologic abnormalities were present.
(15) Patients with chronic uraemia and renal transplant recipients were examined for oto-rhino-laryngological diseases over the course of a five-year period.
(16) The study of the occupational environment effect on workers' health revealed the most prevalent skin, laryngologic, gastrointestinal and bronchiopulmonary diseases.
(17) The number of patients hospitalized for acute infection in the frontal sinuses at the Department of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology of Turku University Hospital has increased markedly during the last decade.
(18) Laryngological examinations were carried out in 528 workers and candidates for work in the mine.
(19) Present day knowledge in laryngology maintains that the free edge of the true cord mucosa is devoid of glands so that retention cysts should not occur in this tissue.
(20) All pateints underwent detailed laryngologic and allergologic examiniation and pulmonary function tests at rest, after exercise, and after histamine inhalation.
Laryngologist
Definition:
(n.) One who applies himself to laryngology.
Example Sentences:
(1) The advent of stroboscopy has proved to be a breakthrough for the laryngologist studying the voice.
(2) In 14 children of them the question of an active procedure was discussed in cooperation of paediatricians, laryngologists and anaesthesiologists.
(3) The article is aimed at laryngologists in general, not surgeons in particular, and has implications for laryngology (being a putative model of diagnostic procedures), physiology (what forces create epilaryngeal configurations?
(4) Detection of an unsuspected minor cleft may be difficult, but the pediatric laryngologist should suspect the possibility of cleft larynx from the clinical features.
(5) The medical control is realised by an oto-rhino-laryngologist.
(6) If there is persistent stridor and aphonia after extubation a laryngologist should be consulted.
(7) Significantly more patients with nasal complex fractures were treated in Bordeaux reflecting management of these injuries by oto-rhino-laryngologists in Bristol.
(8) Cervico-facial carcinology is currently one of the major concerns of oto-rhino-laryngologists.
(9) The laryngologist should consider a nonsquamous neoplasm when the tumor is long-standing, pigmented, covered by intact mucosa, or there is a history of neoplasia.
(10) The role of the pediatric laryngologist has changed.
(11) When observing the vocal fold movements in their laryngoscopic examination, most laryngologists seem to be trained to consider only the gross respiratory movements of the folds, i.e.
(12) Sufficient functional and cosmetic results always need a perfect cooperation between obstetricians, child specialists, oto-rhino-laryngologists, dental- and facial-plastic-surgeons as well as orthodontic-specialists.
(13) The assertion of laryngologists, made while Frederick III was still alive, that the laryngeal carcinoma developed from a specific syphilitic infection is examined here.
(14) In addition to conventional endoscopic operation procedures for vocal fold lateralisation, laser surgery has been used to perform endolaryngeal arytenoidectomy by individual laryngologists during the past few years.
(15) It is stressed that the laryngologist himself must be the photographer.
(16) The diagnosis of laryngeal cancer was made only after it was too late for surgery to have any effect and this delay was due to the differences in opinion between the attending laryngologists; particularly between that of the English physician Morell Mackenzie and the Germans Gehrardt and Bergmann.
(17) No additional important clinical information was gained by the laryngologist's examinations.
(18) The finding of a choristoma may signal a simultaneous occurrence of other lesions of an analogous origin in other localities than that of the bulbus or the orbit, which should lead the ophthalmologist to a complex examination of the patient and an interdisciplinary cooperation with the neurologist, oto-rhino-laryngologist, dermatologist, and others.
(19) A close cooperation between pathologist and laryngologist is necessary.
(20) Cardiovascular disorders during endoscopy of the upper respiratory tract have since long induced anaesthetists and laryngologists to find a suitable anaesthetic procedure.