1 of 5. Dr. Jonathan Aviv prepared for the scope of a patient during a visit in his Office the Upper East Side in New York April 3, 2012.
NEW YORK (Reuters)-the cancer was in Henry’s mind when Gritley Dr. Jonathan Aviv treating him to cough that has been lost to another doctor for a decade. “But I’m too nervous to name it,” said the grandmother of three.
Disorders of vocal fold-Aviv has been diagnosed as the cause of a cough medicine when already responded, during follow-up visits, doctors threaded a thin flexible tube with a camera to Henry tip nose and into his throat. He sat awake like Aviv check His voice box. Then, although Henry is no cancer of the esophagus, Aviv push tubes far below his SAC, using a device to take a biopsy and look for signs of precancerous cells known as Barrett’s of the esophagus.
The rare but deadly cancer screening of the esophagus is usually a procedure tiresome and expensive, requiring sedation and the day of the job. New technology used to make it prevail. Aviv
That’s why a couple of minutes he spent on screening of Henry threatens to open up a new front in the struggle over the costs and benefits of finding disease in patients who are not sick.