The Brazilian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology aims to provide timely information for physicians and scientists focused on otorhinolaryngology and head and neck disorders, including contemporary, ethical, clinically relevant information in:
- General otolaryngology;
- Head and neck surgery;
- Respiratory sleep disorders;
- Allergy/rhinology;
- Otology/neurotology;
- Laryngology/broncho-esophagology;
- Pediatric otolaryngology;
- Cranio-facial surgery;
- Skull base surgery;
- Head and neck oncology;
- Phoniatrics;
- Upper airway related diseases;
- Facial plastics and reconstructive surgery.
The journal is the official peer-reviewed open access scientific publication of the Brazilian Association of Otorhinolaryngology and Cervicofacial Surgery (ABORL-CCF).
All articles will be published under the CC-BY license (Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International) with copyright owned by the ABORL-CCF.
Please note that articles submitted as of May 1, 2022, which are accepted for publication will be subject to a fee (Article Publishing Charge, APC) payment by the author or research funder to cover the costs associated with publication.
Indexed in:
MEDLINE/PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science/SCIE, DOAJ, Lilacs, SciELO, Qualis A3
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The Impact Factor measures the average number of citations received in a particular year by papers published in the journal during the two preceding years.
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SRJ is a prestige metric based on the idea that not all citations are the same. SJR uses a similar algorithm as the Google page rank; it provides a quantitative and qualitative measure of the journal's impact.
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Adhesive bone conduction device elicits improvement in speech perception.
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Adhesive bone conduction do not improve sound localisation abilities.
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Adhesive bone conduction is useful to children with single-sided deafness.
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Elderly presented moderate swallowing impairment for consistencies.
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There was no difference between clinical and instrumental evaluation.
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The assessment of swallowing in the elderly must consider physiological changes.
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Minor complications related with vestibular system were more common.
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Major complications: changes of wound, device failure and electrode extrusion.
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Children with a mean age of 19.3-months are more susceptible to infections.
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There was no correlation between advanced age and higher complication rates.
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Age should not be an exclusion factor.
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Only a small part of patients suffers from ENS after endoscopic skull base surgery.
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Patients undergoing ESBS were likely to suffer nasal problems and sleep disorders.
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Patients who had received radiotherapy have a worse QoL.
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352 tympanic membranes were analyzed.
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7.7% prevalence of tympanic membrane perforation.
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Sensitivity of 85.2%, specificity of 98.1% and accuracy of 97.1%.
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53.4% of the participants considered the video otoscope as the best method.
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A follow-up of the journey of the individual with OSA was carried out.
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64.1% of the participants had still not used CPAP or had given up on therapy.
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Epidemiological and polysomnographic factors did not interfere with the use of CPAP.
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