Airway management in patients with lingual thyroid: a case report and review of the literature.

Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol

Department of Otolaryngology, The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne, 50 Flemington Road, Parkville, VIC, 3052, Australia.

Published: July 2022

Purpose: To review the management of patients with lingual thyroid (LT) causing upper airway obstruction and to suggest a diagnostic and therapeutic workflow.

Methods: A PubMed review of published cases from January 1980 up to December 2020 of LT causing upper airway obstruction. We selected cases of confirmed LTs that presented with non-state-dependent airway obstruction. An illustrative case report is presented.

Results: Twenty-one articles fulfilling the inclusion criteria were found, reporting 24 cases (7 neonatal, 2 pediatric and 15 adults). The main presenting symptoms was dyspnea with increased work of breathing, followed by dysphagia and stridor most commonly in neonates. At least one imaging modality was performed in all patients. Thyroid function was altered in half the patients and normal in the other half. The LT was the only thyroid tissue in all cases except 2. Altogether, 5/24 patients required tracheostomies and two-thirds of the patients underwent surgical resection of the LT (mostly transoral). Also 2/3 of the patients received thyroid replacement therapy. After a median follow-up of 17 months, airway symptoms had fully resolved for all patients but one.

Conclusion: While rare, ectopic LTs should be considered in the differential diagnosis of stridor, dyspnea and airway obstruction. In neonates, concomitant presence of hypothyroidism on neonatal screening and airway obstruction should prompt the search for a LT. Early identification and thyroid replacement therapy seem to significantly relieve symptoms of upper airway obstruction, but severe obstruction and concomitant airway lesions may require more definitive management approaches.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00405-022-07310-0DOI Listing

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