Prepare a short version of your thesis as a paper for publication in a mainline subscription ENT journal. Laryngoscope publishes a lot of abbreviated theses.
There is ASLIB, but this is really nothing more than just a catalogue of Master's and Doctorate theses published in a given year in British and Irish universities.
Firstly, how long is your thesis,? (bearing in mind that most journals tend to set a word limit for contributions of (say) 3K words, abstract excluded, often much less for letters)
Secondly, journals and their content tend to evolve over the years. I would suggest browsing the contents pages of the past (say) three years of a number of well known ENT journals, and see if any of them include contributions on your subject (cartilage tympanoplasty) and chose from that list and follow the editor's guidance for authors.
Don't know about any journal accepting thesis only. There are some editors accepting to publish it in book form - however, they are not very well reputed.
Here are some tips so you can choose easily a journal:
1º - Try to insert the title/abstract into these websites so it can recommend you the most suitable journal - http://journalfinder.elsevier.com ; https://www.edanzediting.com/journal-selector
2º - Select the journal by comparing the quality indexes among those related to your research field - http://www.scimagojr.com/journalrank.php
Dear Parelker, you should extract the relevant portions of your thesis and make it in an article format, concise for wider audience within the Otolaryngology circles and send to a journal for publication. Journal of Laryngology and Otology (JLO) accepts otology articles, and it is an indexed journal. Alternatively, some editors may ask you to contribute a chapter in a book, or even assist you to publish the thesis as a book.
You appear to have acknowledged the contributions of all those who have responded to your question, except me. I do hope that i have not offended you in any way. If so, please accept my sincere apologies.
I would agree with the advice that others have offered, but would re-iterate my own views that most journals tend to impose word limits for papers, many may also limit the number of references that authors are allowed to cite, unless writing a review article.
I know nothing about your thesis, but might it be able to be broken down into a number of parts, each of which could form a 'stand alone' paper, and published over a period of time in one or more relevant journals?
Respected sir, I am very sorry to have not acknowledged your help. I am actually very thankful sir for your guidance.
sir my thesis is about tragal cartilage tympanoplasty: full thickness versus partial thickness grafts, it had 25 cases of safe csom operated using full thickness travail cartilage and the other 25 with partial thickness. The results were compared for 1. graft uptake and 2. hearing improvement.