Free Throat Cancer Screening on April 14
U-M Cancer Center to offer free throat cancer screenings Saturday, April 14
Event part of Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week
U-M Cancer Center to offer free throat cancer screenings Saturday, April 14
Event part of Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week
A new treatment device is taking aim at the root cause of ringing in the ears. Next up: an additional clinical trial to further refine the approach.
Melissa Pynnonen, M.D., professor of otolaryngology, named medical director.
Learn about our Multidisciplinary Microtia Clinic
According to rhinologist, Melissa Pynnonen, M.D., coblation might not be any better than traditional tonsillectomy surgery.
How two Michigan sports fans, a patient and a cancer researcher, are working together this football season to support melanoma research.
2017-18 U.S. News & World Report names U-M Health System #1 in Michigan and #6 in nation for ear, nose and throat care
Families occasionally struggle to decide whether to have their child's adenoids removed. A Michigan Medicine pediatric otolaryngologist explains the procedure.
How a new Ann Arbor program helps those with hearing loss - and provides a blueprint other academic medical centers may follow.
University of Michigan researchers report a new, unexpected cause for "hidden hearing loss," a significant step toward toward the eventual work to identify treatment.
A rare, highly vascular tumor put one teen through two intense surgeries. And its genetic link, U-M doctors discovered, put his family members at risk.
Printed simulations of lifelike body parts allow surgeons-in-training the opportunity to practice complex surgeries before assisting with the real thing.
The Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery is working with physicians to provide the best care to patients in Ghana.
Fans will “Tailgate to Tackle Melanoma” before the U-M vs. MSU football game.
U.S. News & World Report names U-M Health System #1 in Michigan and #8 in nation for ear, nose and throat care
Ten-year-old patient has been on a mission to "beat Boris", his nickname for life-threatening tumor in his throat.
One ear, nose and throat surgeon took the stamina he relies on in the operating room all the way to the finish line of the Boston Marathon, for a sixth time.