C
Charles N. S. Soparkar
Researcher at Baylor College of Medicine
Publications - 48
Citations - 1241
Charles N. S. Soparkar is an academic researcher from Baylor College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Silent sinus syndrome & Orbit (anatomy). The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 48 publications receiving 1137 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles N. S. Soparkar include Boston University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The silent sinus syndrome. A cause of spontaneous enophthalmos.
Charles N. S. Soparkar,James R. Patrinely,Mary Jean Cuaycong,Roger A. Dailey,Robert C. Kersten,Peter A. D. Rubin,John V. Linberg,Gene R. Howard,Donald T. Donovan,Alice Y. Matoba,John B. Holds +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the clinicopathologic features of a benign syndrome ("silent sinus syndrome") with this constellation of features and discuss the possible pathophysiology, which affects individuals at approximately the fourth decade of life.
Journal Article
Negative Sinus Pressure and Normal Predisease Imaging in Silent Sinus Syndrome
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Pearls of Orbital Trauma Management
TL;DR: The most important thing to remember is that the optimal management plan is often variable, and the proper choice regarding which plan to choose rests upon the clinical scenario and the surgeon having an honest perception of his or her level of expertise and comfort level.
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Acute and Chronic Conjunctivitis Due to Over-the-counter Ophthalmic Decongestants
TL;DR: Nonprescription decongestant eyedrops can produce acute and chronic forms of conjunctivitis by pharmacological, toxic, and allergic mechanisms, and once recognized, conjunctival inflammation often takes several weeks to resolve.
Journal ArticleDOI
Medial rectus muscle injuries associated with functional endoscopic sinus surgery: characterization and management.
Christine M. Huang,Dale R. Meyer,James R. Patrinely,Charles N. S. Soparkar,Roger A. Dailey,Marlon Maus,Peter A. D. Rubin,R. Patrick Yeatts,Thomas A. Bersani,James W. Karesh,Andrew R. Harrison,Joseph P. Shovlin +11 more
TL;DR: Medial rectus muscle injury as a complication of FESS can vary markedly and proper characterization and treatment are important, particularly with reference to the degree of direct MR injury (muscle tissue loss) and entrapment.