This clinicopathologic study was undertaken to determine whether true vocal cord fixation produced by epidermoid carcinoma is an absolute contra-indication to treatment by hemilaryngectomy. In a consecutive series of 114 hemilaryngectomies performed at McMillan Hospital (1960-1967) for previously untreated epidermoid carcinoma, 18 patients had fixation of the involved true vocal cord. Each hemilaryngectomy specimen (serial step sections in the longitudinal plane) was re-examined to ascertain the cause of vocal cord fixation; the adequacy of margin; and the presence of blood vessel, nerve sheath and cartilage invasion. Clinical follow-up on each patient was current through December, 1972 (5-12 years postop). All of these cases were seen initially by one of the authors (J.H.O.). Serial sections revealed that true vocal cord fixation was caused by muscle invasion in 14 of the 18 patients. "Positive margins" were present in eight patients but no immediate treatment was given. Two of these patients developed biopsy proven local recurrences, and both were cured with Co60 irradiation. Among the 18 patients with T3 epidermoid carcinoma treated by hemilaryngectomy: a. Three local recurrences developed, all in the anterior commissure. Two were cured with irradiation. The third had a laryngectomy but died from persistent cancer. b. Two patients developed cervical metastases (without local recurrence), and one was salvaged with radical neck dissection. c. Four patients died of other causes, cancer free, three to five years postoperatively. Of the 14 determinant patients, two patients died of cancer. Twelve (85 percent) were alive and free of cancer five years postoperatively. Two had received full course irradiation; one had a radical neck dissection, and all 12 had a functioning larynx. When Ogura's patients are added to the reports of other hemilaryngectomies performed despite true vocal cord fixation (Leroux-Robert [1950] 18/24, Kirchner, Som [1971] 13/19), a determinant salvage rate of 78 percent can be expected. True vocal cord fixation is generally caused by invasion of the vocalis muscle and thus may be well encompassed by a hemilaryngectomy. The precise anatomical limits of the lesion should dictate the type of surgery required for cure.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1288/00005537-197610000-00010 | DOI Listing |
World J Surg Oncol
January 2025
Department of Thoracic Surgery, University Hospitals Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
A 34-year-old male patient with recently diagnosed with medullary thyroid carcinoma underwent total thyroidectomy and radical neck dissection, requiring sharp dissection to separate the tumour from the trachea. He required post operative intubation due to bilateral vocal cord paralysis. He developed ischaemic necrosis of the upper two thirds of the trachea presenting with marked surgical emphysema and an infective wound.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
January 2025
Anesthesiology and Pain and Palliative Medicine, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, NLD.
When a difficult airway is anticipated, awake tracheal intubation can be considered. Usually, low doses of sedatives are administered during this procedure for minimal sedation and anxiolysis, such as midazolam and remifentanil. The newly developed ultra-short-acting benzodiazepine remimazolam has a pharmacokinetic profile that is more suitable for titration during awake tracheal intubation than the long-acting midazolam.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSisli Etfal Hastan Tip Bul
December 2024
Department of General Surgery, Istanbul University, Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul, Türkiye.
Objectives: The extent of the surgical treatment for Graves' disease (GD) has evolved from subtotal to total thyroidectomy. This study analyzes the extent of thyroidectomy for GD and its impact on recurrence and complications, focusing on the relationship between remnant thyroid tissue and recurrence in subtotal thyroidectomy, comparing our current approach with historic data spanning over three decades.
Methods: A retrospective analysis of 427 GD patients who underwent surgery at a tertiary hospital from 1988 to 2022.
Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol
January 2025
Department of Otolaryngology, Robert Debre Hospital, Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris (APHP) and Paris University, 48, Boulevard Sérurier, 75019, Paris, France.
Objectives: This study aimed to identify factors predicting postoperative ICU admission, the need for orotracheal intubation (OTI), and the occurrence of supraglottic stenosis in children undergoing supraglottoplasty for laryngomalacia.
Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted on 31 children (Dear Reviewer, we would have greatly preferred to include a larger sample size. However, as you know, this type of management is rare, and we deliberately selected a 7-year period to ensure a minimum of 30 children while avoiding significant differences in management guidelines over time.
Updates Surg
January 2025
1St Propaedeutic Surgical Department, University Hospital of Thessaloniki AHEPA, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUTH), 5462, Thessaloniki, Greece.
The unprecedented technical and technological evolution in thyroid surgery has labelled it as an extremely safe and efficient procedure, and indeed "typifies perhaps better than any other operation the supreme triumph of the surgeon's art."-William Halsted, 1852-1922. Surgeon's experience reflected by annual case load is the most important denominator in thyroid surgery.
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