Audio-Digest Foundation Announces the Release of Otolaryngology Volume 46, Issue 17: Dysgeusia
Glendale, CA (PRWEB) December 23, 2013 -- Audio-Digest Foundation announces the release of Otolaryngology Volume 46, Issue 17: Dysgeusia.
After hearing and assimilating the information in this program, the clinician will be better able to:
1. Cite a hypothesis that explains epidemiologic data showing higher body mass index (BMI) in adults who had otitis media or tonsillectomy as children.
2. Explain the relationship of the chorda tympani and glossopharyngeal nerves to alterations in taste.
3. Define the phenomenon of “taste phantoms” and propose a physiologic mechanism by which they come about.
4. Compare orthonasal olfaction to retronasal olfaction and explain the relation between retronasal olfaction to taste.
5. Relate the phenomenon of “supertasters” to burning mouth syndrome.
The original programs were presented by Linda Bartoshuk, PhD, Professor, Department of Community Dentistry and Behavior Sciences, and Director of Human Research, Center for Smell and Taste, University of Florida Health, Gainesville.
Audio-Digest Foundation, the largest independent publisher of Continuing Medical Education in the world, records over 10,000 hours of lectures every year in anesthesiology, emergency medicine, family practice, gastroenterology, general surgery, internal medicine, neurology, obstetrics/gynecology, oncology, ophthalmology, orthopaedics, otolaryngology, pediatrics, psychology, and urology, by the leading medical researchers at the top laboratories, universities, and institutions.
Recent researchers have hailed from Harvard, Cedars-Sinai, Mayo Clinic, UCSF, The University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, The University of Kansas Medical Center, The University of California, San Diego, The University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, The University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and many others.
Out of these cutting-edge programs, Audio-Digest then chooses the most clinically relevant, edits them for clarity, and publishes them either every week or every two weeks.
In addition, Audio-Digest publishes subscription series in conjunction with leading medical societies: DiabetesInsight with The American Diabetes Association, ACCEL with The American College of Cardiology, Continuum Audio with The American Academy of Neurology, and Journal Watch Audio General Medicine with Massachusetts Medical Society.
For 60 years, the global medical community of doctors, nurses, physician assistants, and other medical professionals around the world has subscribed to Audio-Digest specialty series in order to remain current in their specialties as well as to maintain their Continuing Education requirements with the most cutting-edge, independent, and unbiased continuing medical education (CME).
Long a technical innovator, Audio-Digest was the first to produce audio medical education programs and the first to produce in-car medical education. Currently, its subscription and annual products are available on CD and MP3, as well as iPhone, iPad, and Android apps.
Paul Angles, Audio-Digest, http://www.audio-digest.org, +1 (818) 844-3237, [email protected]
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