Reoperative thyroid surgery in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia

From 1996 to 2001, 393 thyroidectomies were performed and 25 (6.4%) patients underwent reoperative thyroid surgery at Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia. All reoperated patients had undergone one prior thyroid operation. All were females with an average age of 39.1 years (18-61 years). The most freq...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tuan Norhafizah binti Tuan Zakaria
Other Authors: Myint, Tun
Format: Journal
Published: Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.myjurnal.my/public/article-view.php?id=3481
id oai:www.myjurnal.my:3481
recordtype eprints
spelling oai:www.myjurnal.my:34812018-09-20T00:00:00Z Reoperative thyroid surgery in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia Tuan Norhafizah binti Tuan Zakaria Medicine From 1996 to 2001, 393 thyroidectomies were performed and 25 (6.4%) patients underwent reoperative thyroid surgery at Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia. All reoperated patients had undergone one prior thyroid operation. All were females with an average age of 39.1 years (18-61 years). The most frequent indication for reoperation was cancer in resected specimen of an originally misdiagnosed carcinoma treated by partial thyroid resection. Final histological diagnosis of 25 reoperations showed thyroid carcinoma in 22 (88%) cases and multinodular goiter in 3 cases. The overall interval between the initial and the reoperative procedures ranged from 3 weeks to 15 years. There was no post-operative mortality after reoperation. Post-operative complications were discovered in 5 patients, as 3 (12%) of whom had transient hypocalcaemia, one (4%) had wound breakdown and one (4%) had permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy. Reoperative thyroid surgery is an uncommon operation with high complication rate. During the 6-year period from January 1996 to December 2001, 393 patients underwent primary thyroid operations at Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia and reoperative thyroid surgery was performed on 25 (6.4%) patients. All patients had undergone one prior thyroid surgical operation. The records of all these patients including history, physical examination, operation, pathology reports and follow up visits were reviewed. In general, complications of reoperative thyroid surgery are higher than primary surgical procedure. But a total thyroidectomy will remove residual tumour in the remaining contralateral lobe of thyroid gland in 43% of patients. Total thyroidectomy prevents the recurrent disease in a multinodular goiter. In addition total thyroidectomy allows the patient to be scanned for residual thyroid remnant and distant metastases. The present study shows four percent permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve injury and twelve percent transient hypocalcaemia in patients after reoperative thyroid surgery. Complications were seen in both benign and malignant thyroid diseases. Reoperative thyroid surgery is an uncommon operation with increased morbidity. With careful attention to operative details to preserve the recurrent laryngeal nerves and the parathyroid glands, the complications can be minimized to an acceptable level. At the same time the advantages of total thyroidectomy has indicated that reoperative thyroid surgery is a feasible procedure in proper circumstances. Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia Myint, Tun 2003-00-00 Journal application/pdf 3481 www.myjurnal.my/filebank/published_article/16377MJMS_2003_Myint.pdf www.myjurnal.my/public/article-view.php?id=3481
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local Institution
institution MyJournal
building MyJournal Repository
collection Online Access
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Tuan Norhafizah binti Tuan Zakaria
Reoperative thyroid surgery in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia
description From 1996 to 2001, 393 thyroidectomies were performed and 25 (6.4%) patients underwent reoperative thyroid surgery at Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia. All reoperated patients had undergone one prior thyroid operation. All were females with an average age of 39.1 years (18-61 years). The most frequent indication for reoperation was cancer in resected specimen of an originally misdiagnosed carcinoma treated by partial thyroid resection. Final histological diagnosis of 25 reoperations showed thyroid carcinoma in 22 (88%) cases and multinodular goiter in 3 cases. The overall interval between the initial and the reoperative procedures ranged from 3 weeks to 15 years. There was no post-operative mortality after reoperation. Post-operative complications were discovered in 5 patients, as 3 (12%) of whom had transient hypocalcaemia, one (4%) had wound breakdown and one (4%) had permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy. Reoperative thyroid surgery is an uncommon operation with high complication rate. During the 6-year period from January 1996 to December 2001, 393 patients underwent primary thyroid operations at Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia and reoperative thyroid surgery was performed on 25 (6.4%) patients. All patients had undergone one prior thyroid surgical operation. The records of all these patients including history, physical examination, operation, pathology reports and follow up visits were reviewed. In general, complications of reoperative thyroid surgery are higher than primary surgical procedure. But a total thyroidectomy will remove residual tumour in the remaining contralateral lobe of thyroid gland in 43% of patients. Total thyroidectomy prevents the recurrent disease in a multinodular goiter. In addition total thyroidectomy allows the patient to be scanned for residual thyroid remnant and distant metastases. The present study shows four percent permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve injury and twelve percent transient hypocalcaemia in patients after reoperative thyroid surgery. Complications were seen in both benign and malignant thyroid diseases. Reoperative thyroid surgery is an uncommon operation with increased morbidity. With careful attention to operative details to preserve the recurrent laryngeal nerves and the parathyroid glands, the complications can be minimized to an acceptable level. At the same time the advantages of total thyroidectomy has indicated that reoperative thyroid surgery is a feasible procedure in proper circumstances.
author2 Myint, Tun
author_facet Myint, Tun
Tuan Norhafizah binti Tuan Zakaria
format Journal
author Tuan Norhafizah binti Tuan Zakaria
author_sort Tuan Norhafizah binti Tuan Zakaria
title Reoperative thyroid surgery in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia
title_short Reoperative thyroid surgery in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia
title_full Reoperative thyroid surgery in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia
title_fullStr Reoperative thyroid surgery in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Reoperative thyroid surgery in Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia
title_sort reoperative thyroid surgery in hospital universiti sains malaysia
publisher Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia
publishDate 2003
url http://www.myjurnal.my/public/article-view.php?id=3481
first_indexed 2018-09-20T07:30:53Z
last_indexed 2018-09-20T07:30:53Z
_version_ 1612219164585361408