Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy after thyroid surgery.

Journal: International Surgery
Published:
Abstract

The identification of the risk factors associated with the increased incidence of the nerve injury is of paramount importance. Twenty-nine of 581 patients who developed recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy after thyroidectomy were analyzed retrospectively. There were 23 women (79%) and 6 men (21%), with a mean age of 45.6 years (range, 22-66 years). Eleven patients had right vocal cord paralysis, 8 had left vocal cord paralysis, and 10 patients had bilateral involvement. Ten patients underwent near total thyroidectomy (34.4%), eight patients underwent bilateral subtotal thyroidectomy (27.5%), six patients underwent total thyroidectomy (20.7%), and five patients underwent unilateral lobectomy (17.2%). Four of 10 patients with bilateral vocal cord paralysis had a unilateral nerve injury detected with laryngoscopy before surgery. Only five patients developed permanent vocal cord paralysis (17%). Three patients with permanent paralysis underwent reoperative thyroid surgery and had a total lobectomy. One patient required a tracheostomy, and arytenoidectomy was performed in one patient at a later follow-up period. Most recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy after thyroidectomy was transient. Permanent paralysis is associated with reoperative thyroid surgery.

Authors
Orhan Alimoglu, Murat Akdag, Bulent Kaya, Ramazan Eryilmaz, Ismail Okan, Aytekin Coskun, Mustafa Sahin
Relevant Conditions

Thyroidectomy, Endoscopy

Similar Publications