Dr. Seckin Ulualp
Ear-Nose and Throat Doctor (Pediatric) | Pediatric Otolaryngology
445 Lenox Road 8th Floor Brooklyn NY, 11203About
Dr. Seckin Ulualp practices Pediatric Otolaryngology in Galveston, TX. Pediatric otolaryngologists are primarily concerned with medical and surgical treatment of ear, nose, and throat diseases in children. Services that Dr. Ulualp provides include the diagnosis and treatment of ear, nose, and throat disorders, and head and neck diseases; surgery of the head and neck, including before and after-surgery care; consultation with other doctors when ear, nose, or throat diseases are detected; and assistance in the identification of communication disorders in children.
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Pharyngeal pH monitoring in patients with posterior laryngitis.
- Possible relationship of gastroesophagopharyngeal acid reflux with pathogenesis of chronic sinusitis.
- Antileukotriene therapy for the relief of sinus symptoms in aspirin triad disease.
- Increased adenoid mast cells in patients with otitis media with effusion.
- Pharyngeal acid reflux in patients with single and multiple otolaryngologic disorders.
- Assessment of auditory cortex activation with functional magnetic resonance imaging.
- Osteoplastic flap versus modified endoscopic Lothrop procedure in patients with
- Laryngopharyngeal reflux: state of the art diagnosis and treatment.
- Effect of ageing on the upper and lower oesophageal sphincters.
- Loss of secondary esophageal peristalsis is not a contributory pathogenetic factor in posterior laryngitis.
- Outcomes of acid suppressive therapy in patients with posterior laryngitis.
- Relative contribution of various airway protective mechanisms to prevention of aspiration during swallowing.
- Meta-analysis of upper probe measurements in normal subjects and patients with laryngopharyngeal reflux.
- Flexible laryngoscopy-guided pharyngeal pH monitoring in infants.
- Microdebrider removal of tracheal papilloma via tracheostomy in the child with an obliterated larynx.
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