Sinan Kocatürk1, Unsal Han, D Yilmazer, Binnur Onal, Unsal Erkam. 1. Department of II Otorhinolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Social Security Organization, Ankara Education Hospital, Sivas, Turkey. sinankocaturk@yahoo.com
Abstract
PATIENTS AND METHODS: Surgical specimens belonging to 16 patients who underwent partial laryngectomy for T1 glottic cancer were subjected to detailed histopathologic examination; 11 of the patients were staged as T1a while 5 were staged as T1b. RESULTS: It was detected that in 11 patients the tumor was confined to the mucosal or submucosal connective layer, and in 5 (31.2%) cases, the tumor invaded the thyroarytenoid (TA) muscle. In cases involving the one-third anterior part of the vocal cords and the anterior commissure, a 50% (4/8) TA muscle invasion was detected. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Our finding TA muscle invasion at the rate of 31.2% in our 16 case series clinically staged as T1 revealed that deep invasion did not always impair the vocal cord mobility. Observing TA muscle invasion at the rate of 50% in cases involving the one-third anterior part of the vocal cord and the anterior commissure suggested that TA muscle invasion in the anterior part did not significantly impair mobility.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: Surgical specimens belonging to 16 patients who underwent partial laryngectomy for T1 glottic cancer were subjected to detailed histopathologic examination; 11 of the patients were staged as T1a while 5 were staged as T1b. RESULTS: It was detected that in 11 patients the tumor was confined to the mucosal or submucosal connective layer, and in 5 (31.2%) cases, the tumor invaded the thyroarytenoid (TA) muscle. In cases involving the one-third anterior part of the vocal cords and the anterior commissure, a 50% (4/8) TA muscle invasion was detected. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Our finding TA muscle invasion at the rate of 31.2% in our 16 case series clinically staged as T1 revealed that deep invasion did not always impair the vocal cord mobility. Observing TA muscle invasion at the rate of 50% in cases involving the one-third anterior part of the vocal cord and the anterior commissure suggested that TA muscle invasion in the anterior part did not significantly impair mobility.
Authors: B Pittore; H Ismail-Koch; A Davis; G Parodo; G P Ledda; P A Brennan; R Puxeddu Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol Date: 2009-03-13 Impact factor: 2.503
Authors: Pavel Dulguerov; Martina A Broglie; Guido Henke; Marco Siano; Paul Martin Putora; Christian Simon; Daniel Zwahlen; Gerhard F Huber; Giorgio Ballerini; Lorenza Beffa; Roland Giger; Sacha Rothschild; Sandro V Negri; Olgun Elicin Journal: Front Oncol Date: 2019-10-24 Impact factor: 6.244