Guest Lecturers Carry on Tradition of Excellence
The leaders in medical science of the past built a platform for the leaders of today. And those leaders are now building a platform for the leaders to come. Sometimes their paths have crossed generations, sometimes not. One such leader, Nancy L. Snyderman, MD, a TV medical news star and a head and neck surgeon, will present the John Conley, MD Lecture. Dr. Conley was famous as one of the most innovative and successful of otolaryngological surgeons. Derald E. Brackmann, MD, another of the special speakers at the AAO-HNSF 2013 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPOSM, will present a lecture in the name of his own mentor, who taught him, “Always adapt to changes as they develop.” Change in all medical particulars is the norm now, from economics to reporting systems to the practice of medicine. Some of the leading otolaryngology-head and neck surgery experts will speak before the attendees at this year’s meeting. They will provide the platform to educate their peers and the young physicians who will follow. John Conley, MD Lecture on Medical Ethics 9:10 am-9:30 am Sunday, September 29 “Conversations with Yourself: The Natural Metamorphosis of a Surgeon” Nancy L. Snyderman, MD, has won research grants and journalism awards, a rare combination in either medicine or journalism, and a tribute to her drive and the conquering of fear, which she says keeps many people from achieving everything they want. She told a biographer: “When I’m sitting at a patient’s bedside explaining surgery, my challenge is still to take very complicated stuff, and in a non-condescending manner, talk to a patient. Well, on television it’s the same thing. I have to take complicated stuff and explain to 10 or 12 million people. The skill set is exactly the same.” A third-generation physician, she says her three mentors were her parents and her chief of surgery during her residency at the University of Pittsburgh, Eugene N. Myers, MD, FRCS Edin. (Hon). “He taught me how to be a really good surgeon… and it’s a lot for him that I vowed that no matter what my other careers were, I would never give up medicine.” And she hasn’t; she is still a practicing head and neck cancer surgeon. She is also Chief Medical Editor for NBC News and AARP The Magazine’s newest columnist. Eugene N. Myers, MD International Lecture on Head and Neck Cancer 9:30 am-10:20 am Monday, September 30 Piero Nicolai, MD, will deliver the Myers lecture, contributing his extensive experience on the subject of when, what kind of surgery, what is new, and more. Nicolai is professor and chairman of the department of otorhinolaryngology at the University of Brescia, in northern Italy. He completed his residency in otolaryngology and subsequently in medical oncology. His clinical and research activities are focused on head and neck oncology and endoscopic sinus and skull base surgery. He has traveled extensively to advance the knowledge of his specialty. In April, he participated in an endoscopic sinus and skull base surgery program presented in Phoenix as a Mayo Clinic Continuous Professional Development program, and he has been awarded the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery Honor Award in recognition of his volunteer contributions to the Academy and its Foundation. Eugene N. Myers, MD, FRCS Edin (Hon), is Distinguished Professor and Emeritus chair, department of otolaryngology of the University of Pittsburgh Medical College. A man active in the practice and the science of medicine, he is a celebrated author of many books in the field. His own research specialty is head and neck oncologic surgery. Howard P. House, MD Memorial Lecture for Advances in Otology 8:00 am-9:20 am Tuesday, October 1 Derald E. Brackmann, MD, of the House Clinic, trained with the medical genius who was Howard P. House, MD. Dr. House, who died at age 95 in 2003, is a legend in the hearing impairment world, having developed groundbreaking surgeries to restore hearing. His one-man laboratory in Los Angeles eventually became the clinic that draws otolaryngologists from around the world to advance treatments for hearing problems. Dr. Brackmann joined the House Institute in the early 1970s. He is now a foremost neurotologist, and will speak on skull base tumors. Dr. Brackmann has helped develop the auditory brainstem implant and is a leader in removal of acoustic neuromas. “Many changes have occurred in the management of skull base tumors during my career,” Dr. Brackmann said, and his work with Dr. House trained him to be prepared for changes. Author of four textbooks and co-editor of an annual series on advances in otolaryngology and head and neck surgery, Dr. Brackmann is clinical professor of otolaryngology and head and neck surgery and neurosurgery at Los Angeles County USC Medical Center. Neel Distinguished Research Lecture 9:30 am-10:20 am Tuesday, October 1 Martin A. Birchall, MD, FRCS, and Professor of Laryngology at the University College of London Ear Institute, Royal National Throat, Nose, and Ear Hospital, will present the Neel lecture. The Neel family and friends established the award in 1993 to disseminate information on new developments in biomedical science. Dr. Birchall will bring his expertise to bear on a subject guaranteed to spur discussion and draw listeners: the exciting prospects and problems with stem cells and airway transplantation. His view: “The drive to regenerate man, or indeed create new human life in whole or in part, is as old as history itself. The legend of Prometheus has been recapitulated throughout the centuries, including by Mary Shelley and Asimov. The contemporary surgeon can take parts from dead human donors and bring them ‘back to life’ in transplantation. “Early first-in-man successes with stem-cell based tracheal replacements in adults and children suggest great promise for such technology… [but] before the Promethean dream can be realized, if indeed it is, many hurdles, scientific, practical, financial and ethical, have to be negotiated. A potential route to clinic will be presented for these exciting new therapies.” Cotton-Fitton Endowed Lecture In Pediatric Otolaryngology 9:30 am-10:20 am Wednesday, October 2 A lecture established to educate otolaryngologists in the care of children will have acclaimed physician Joseph E. Kerschner, MD, as its speaker. Dr. Kerschner is dean of the medical school and executive vice-president of the Medical College of Wisconsin. His subject will be otitis media (OM). He explained, “As we have entered the age of molecular and personalized medicine, our relatively basic understanding of mechanisms of pathophysiology has made quantum leaps with the promise for innovative and novel solutions for OM in the near future.” Dr. Kerschner has a long history of work in pediatric medicine, including as president-elect of the American Society of Pediatric Otolaryngology. He has written 17 books, is a mentor to students, residents, and junior faculty, and maintains an active clinical practice. He also represents his fellow physicians, for example, as a co-writer of a white paper published in the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel on the dangers of sequestration to Wisconsin’s medical.
The leaders in medical science of the past built a platform for the leaders of today. And those leaders are now building a platform for the leaders to come. Sometimes their paths have crossed generations, sometimes not. One such leader, Nancy L. Snyderman, MD, a TV medical news star and a head and neck surgeon, will present the John Conley, MD Lecture. Dr. Conley was famous as one of the most innovative and successful of otolaryngological surgeons. Derald E. Brackmann, MD, another of the special speakers at the AAO-HNSF 2013 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPOSM, will present a lecture in the name of his own mentor, who taught him, “Always adapt to changes as they develop.”
Change in all medical particulars is the norm now, from economics to reporting systems to the practice of medicine. Some of the leading otolaryngology-head and neck surgery experts will speak before the attendees at this year’s meeting. They will provide the platform to educate their peers and the young physicians who will follow.
John Conley, MD Lecture on Medical Ethics
9:10 am-9:30 am
Sunday, September 29
“Conversations with Yourself: The Natural Metamorphosis of a Surgeon”
Nancy L. Snyderman, MD, has won research grants and journalism awards, a rare combination in either medicine or journalism, and a tribute to her drive and the conquering of fear, which she says keeps many people from achieving everything they want. She told a biographer: “When I’m sitting at a patient’s bedside explaining surgery, my challenge is still to take very complicated stuff, and in a non-condescending manner, talk to a patient. Well, on television it’s the same thing. I have to take complicated stuff and explain to 10 or 12 million people. The skill set is exactly the same.”
A third-generation physician, she says her three mentors were her parents and her chief of surgery during her residency at the University of Pittsburgh, Eugene N. Myers, MD, FRCS Edin. (Hon). “He taught me how to be a really good surgeon… and it’s a lot for him that I vowed that no matter what my other careers were, I would never give up medicine.” And she hasn’t; she is still a practicing head and neck cancer surgeon. She is also Chief Medical Editor for NBC News and AARP The Magazine’s newest columnist.
Eugene N. Myers, MD International Lecture on Head and Neck Cancer
9:30 am-10:20 am
Monday, September 30
Piero Nicolai, MD, will deliver the Myers lecture, contributing his extensive experience on the subject of when, what kind of surgery, what is new, and more. Nicolai is professor and chairman of the department of otorhinolaryngology at the University of Brescia, in northern Italy. He completed his residency in otolaryngology and subsequently in medical oncology. His clinical and research activities are focused on head and neck oncology and endoscopic sinus and skull base surgery. He has traveled extensively to advance the knowledge of his specialty.
In April, he participated in an endoscopic sinus and skull base surgery program presented in Phoenix as a Mayo Clinic Continuous Professional Development program, and he has been awarded the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery Honor Award in recognition of his volunteer contributions to the Academy and its Foundation.
Eugene N. Myers, MD, FRCS Edin (Hon), is Distinguished Professor and Emeritus chair, department of otolaryngology of the University of Pittsburgh Medical College. A man active in the practice and the science of medicine, he is a celebrated author of many books in the field. His own research specialty is head and neck oncologic surgery.
Howard P. House, MD Memorial Lecture for Advances in Otology
8:00 am-9:20 am
Tuesday, October 1
Derald E. Brackmann, MD, of the House Clinic, trained with the medical genius who was Howard P. House, MD. Dr. House, who died at age 95 in 2003, is a legend in the hearing impairment world, having developed groundbreaking surgeries to restore hearing. His one-man laboratory in Los Angeles eventually became the clinic that draws otolaryngologists from around the world to advance treatments for hearing problems.
Dr. Brackmann joined the House Institute in the early 1970s. He is now a foremost neurotologist, and will speak on skull base tumors. Dr. Brackmann has helped develop the auditory brainstem implant and is a leader in removal of acoustic neuromas. “Many changes have occurred in the management of skull base tumors during my career,” Dr. Brackmann said, and his work with Dr. House trained him to be prepared for changes. Author of four textbooks and co-editor of an annual series on advances in otolaryngology and head and neck surgery, Dr. Brackmann is clinical professor of otolaryngology and head and neck surgery and neurosurgery at Los Angeles County USC Medical Center.
Neel Distinguished Research Lecture
9:30 am-10:20 am
Tuesday, October 1
Martin A. Birchall, MD, FRCS, and Professor of Laryngology at the University College of London Ear Institute, Royal National Throat, Nose, and Ear Hospital, will present the Neel lecture. The Neel family and friends established the award in 1993 to disseminate information on new developments in biomedical science. Dr. Birchall will bring his expertise to bear on a subject guaranteed to spur discussion and draw listeners: the exciting prospects and problems with stem cells and airway transplantation. His view: “The drive to regenerate man, or indeed create new human life in whole or in part, is as old as history itself. The legend of Prometheus has been recapitulated throughout the centuries, including by Mary Shelley and Asimov. The contemporary surgeon can take parts from dead human donors and bring them ‘back to life’ in transplantation.
“Early first-in-man successes with stem-cell based tracheal replacements in adults and children suggest great promise for such technology… [but] before the Promethean dream can be realized, if indeed it is, many hurdles, scientific, practical, financial and ethical, have to be negotiated. A potential route to clinic will be presented for these exciting new therapies.”
Cotton-Fitton Endowed Lecture In Pediatric Otolaryngology
9:30 am-10:20 am
Wednesday, October 2
A lecture established to educate otolaryngologists in the care of children will have acclaimed physician Joseph E. Kerschner, MD, as its speaker. Dr. Kerschner is dean of the medical school and executive vice-president of the Medical College of Wisconsin. His subject will be otitis media (OM). He explained, “As we have entered the age of molecular and personalized medicine, our relatively basic understanding of mechanisms of pathophysiology has made quantum leaps with the promise for innovative and novel solutions for OM in the near future.”
Dr. Kerschner has a long history of work in pediatric medicine, including as president-elect of the American Society of Pediatric Otolaryngology. He has written 17 books, is a mentor to students, residents, and junior faculty, and maintains an active clinical practice. He also represents his fellow physicians, for example, as a co-writer of a white paper published in the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel on the dangers of sequestration to Wisconsin’s medical.