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This study aimed to evaluate the impact of intra-operative neuromonitoring of the recurrent laryngeal nerve during total thyroidectomy for benign goitre.
Methods:
A single-centre retrospective study using historical controls was conducted for a 10-year period, comprising a series of 767 patients treated by total thyroidectomy for benign goitre. Of these, 306 had intra-operative neuromonitoring of the recurrent laryngeal nerve and 461 did not. Post-operative laryngeal mobility was assessed in all patients by direct laryngoscopy before hospital discharge and at post-operative follow-up visits.
Results:
In all, 6 out of 461 patients (1.30 per cent) in the control group and 6 out of 306 patients (1.96 per cent) in the intra-operative neuromonitoring group developed permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy. No statistically significant difference was observed between the two patient groups.
Conclusion:
Intra-operative neuromonitoring does not appear to affect the post-operative recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy rate or to reliably predict post-operative recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy. However, it can accurately predict good nerve function after thyroidectomy.
To present a case of unilateral vocal fold paralysis due to Mycobacterium kansasii induced pressure on the left recurrent laryngeal nerve, a specific aetiology not previously reported in the world literature.
Case report:
A 57-year-old Caucasian man presented with a short history of productive cough, fever, hoarseness and 14-kg weight loss. He was a smoker, had an abnormal chest X-ray and was human immunodeficiency virus negative. A sputum sample was positive on direct microscopy for acid fast bacilli. Initially, the patient was treated with Rifater (rifampicin, isoniazid and pyrazinamide) and ethambutol. Mycobacterium kansasii was isolated and proved sensitive to this antimycobacterial treatment. Nasoendoscopy revealed diminished movement of the left vocal fold, and a computed tomography scan showed enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes anterior to the aortic arch. After three months of antimycobacterial treatment, the vocal folds were fully mobile at repeat nasoendoscopy, and this coincided with gradual resolution of the patient's hoarseness and weight loss.
Conclusions:
There are many causes of unilateral vocal fold paralysis. This case illustrates the importance of anatomical knowledge in reaching a diagnosis, and also presents the first reported case of Mycobacterium kansasii creating this clinical picture.
Retrospective review of all patients with recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy seen at a comprehensive cancer centre over a 30 month period has revealed three patients with this diagnosis apparently related to massive venous thrombosis. All three patients had an underlying diagnosis of malignancy (two colon, one breast) and an indwelling central venous access device with its tip in the superior vena cava. Direct laryngoscopy was otherwise normal in all patients, and two had normal CT scans of the neck and mediastinum. This third patient had mediastinal adenopathy, but this was unchanged from the previous nine months. Although two patients expired shortly after this presentation, the other patient lived for one year and his palsy resolved with the resolution of his superior vena cava syndrome. Mediastinal inflammation secondary to the thrombophlebitis may be the direct cause of this unusual presentation.
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