Literature DB >> 16219955

Surgical management of substernal goitre: local experience.

T L Chow1, T T F Chan, D T K Suen, D W Chu, S H Lam.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine the presentation, workup, and surgical complications of substernal goitre.
DESIGN: Retrospective study.
SETTING: Regional hospital, Hong Kong. PATIENTS: Twenty-four mostly elderly patients (mean age, 60.1 years) who underwent thyroidectomy for substernal goitres between 2000 and 2003 (substernal goitres were defined as those having either a caudal mass transgressing the fourth thoracic vertebra or having more than 50% of their overall mass residing within the thorax). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Symptoms, histopathological diagnoses, morbidities, and complications.
RESULTS: Dyspnoea was the most common symptom (n=8, 33%). Three (12.5%) patients presented with acute airway obstruction; however, 13 (54.2%) were asymptomatic apart from the presence of cervical masses. Computed tomographic scans were performed on all but two patients. Malignancy was present in 12.6% of patients, or 16.8% if occult papillary carcinoma is included. Partial or full sternotomies were performed in two (8.3%) patients. Complications included recurrent laryngeal nerve injury (n=1, 2.7% of nerves at risk), transient hypoparathyroidism (n=2, 13.3% of patients at risk), haematoma (n=1, 2.7%), pneumonia (n=1, 2.7%), and wound infection (n=1, 2.7%). There was no operative mortality or permanent hypoparathyroidism. The complication rate was significantly lower in the asymptomatic patients (P=0.033 by Fisher's exact test); clinicopathological parameters were otherwise statistically comparable between the two groups.
CONCLUSIONS: There is rarely any mortality in thyroidectomy for substernal goitre, and the morbidity is also very low, especially in asymptomatic patients. In the absence of contra-indications, substernal goitre should be treated with early surgery rather than having it run the risk of acute airway distress or cancer.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16219955

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hong Kong Med J        ISSN: 1024-2708            Impact factor:   2.227


  4 in total

1.  Evidence-based surgical management of substernal goiter.

Authors:  Matthew L White; Gerard M Doherty; Paul G Gauger
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  2008-07       Impact factor: 3.352

2.  Surgical management of retrosternal goiter: Local experience at a university hospital.

Authors:  Gamal A Khairy; Abdulaziz A Al-Saif; Sami A Alnassar; Waseem M Hajjar
Journal:  Ann Thorac Med       Date:  2012-04       Impact factor: 2.219

3.  Predictors of the need for an extracervical approach to intrathoracic goitre.

Authors:  T Tikka; I J Nixon; K Harrison-Phipps; R Simo
Journal:  BJS Open       Date:  2018-12-26

4.  A critical analysis of 33 patients with substernal goiter surgically treated by neck incision.

Authors:  Murilo Catafesta Das Neves; Marcello Rosano; Flávio Carneiro Hojaij; Márcio Abrahão; Onivaldo Cervantes; Danielle Macellaro Andreoni
Journal:  Braz J Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2009 Mar-Apr
  4 in total

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