For many years, the alternative to functional procedures
in which the glottic or supraglottic level are preserved
(cordectomy of varying extents, supraglottic horizontal
laryngectomy) was total laryngectomy, as replacement
sphincteric function was not believed to be possible.The merit goes to Serafini , despite the initial failures of
tracheohyoidoepiglottopexy, for having stimulated the
research into techniques to replace total laryngectomy -
making it possible to reconstruct the aerodigestive crossroads,
whilst maintaining the three functions of the larynx,
despite the absence of the “conventional” structures
(epiglottis, false cords, vocal cords) assigned to sphincteric
function.All this was facilitated by the simultaneous development
of speech therapy strategies, thanks primarily to the
French schools, aimed at readapting swallowing first and
subsequently speech to the neoglottis characterised by a
dynamic opposition between the anterior structures (epiglottis
or base of the tongue) and one or two arytenoids to
the rear, which must maintain good movement for arytenoid
health.In the absence of the bases for adequate functional recovery
(correct surgical technique with preservation of the
function of the laryngeal nerves, correctly performed reconstruction,
immediate post-operative rehabilitation) or
in the presence of various types of complication that cause
non-optimal anatomic and functional sequelae, recovery
of the swallowing function can be problematic especially
in patients whose neurological situation does not require
efficacious neuronal plasticity.In some cases, due to the persistence of swallowing difficulties,
with progressive weight loss and the occurrence
of repeated episodes of aspiration with bronchopneumonic
complications, use of PEG can constitute a provisional
measure for allowing an extension of the rehabilitation
programme. If the functional situation does not improve
to allow adequate, risk-free eating, patients are often offered
total laryngectomy.In order to avoid this kind of conclusion to the treatment
programme, which undoubtedly represents a failure for
functional surgery and is deeply frustrating for a patient who
has gone through a difficult and exasperating postoperative
phase in the hope of avoiding permanent tracheostomy,
since the late 1980s, some Authors - have suggested surgical
methods that aim to improve neoglottic competence and consequently, the functions (swallowing and voice) related
to the sphincteric ability of the larynx. This functional rehabilitational
surgery is gradually being adopted, after the
early experiences based exclusively on injective laryngoplasty
techniques in the light of more detailed evaluations
of the various causes of deglutition failure.Moreover, only with injective methods is it possible to
find solutions to minimal pre- and post-deglutition disorders
that, due to the presence of an efficacious expulsive
cough, do not constitute a risk for the lower airways,
rather a cause of inconvenience for the patient in social
situations, which thus compromises quality of life.In parallel with the attempts to solve the problems of neoglottic
insufficiency, a voice surgery technique has been
developed with the aim of improving glottic competence
following cordectomy to improve voice quality and eliminate
the phonoasthenia that often represents the greatest
handicap for these patients -.
Cordectomy
In cordectomies, the functional sequelae are exclusively
voice-related. Difficulties swallowing liquids for the few
days immediately after the procedure are temporary and
resolve spontaneously in a few days. Dysphonia can be
the direct consequence of glottic insufficiency, the effect
of an anterior adherence (often inevitable when resection
also affects the anterior commissure) or caused by
supraglottic compensations (from false cords or arytenoepiglottic)
favoured by certain situations, such as: oedematous
arytenoids, pre-existent hypertrophy of the false
cords, extensive glottic resections, retroverted epiglottis,
spontaneous, unfavourable compensation due to the absence
of postoperative speech therapy.Speech therapy can resolve speech problems after limited
resection (type I and II cordectomies) or after type III cordectomies
with the formation of significant neocord scarring.
It is also the first line of treatment since any late
voice surgery, indicated in the event of unsatisfactory results
after rehabilitation, is not recommended for at least
6 months.Some Authors have suggested immediate surgical rehabilitation,
during the same surgical session as the cordectomy,
using autologous fat . On the basis of these experiences,
we introduced into our clinical practice primary surgical rehabilitation using hyaluronic acid with both
augmentation aims and in order to improve the scarring
processes with a stiffer neocord and that therefore can be
applicable also to mucosectomy (type I cordectomy). This
makes it possible to obtain a volume increase without additional
morbidity around the harvesting site as occurs for
fat and with a consequent reduction in the time needed
to perform the procedure. We use a Medtronic Xomed
Laryngeal Injector with a 27-gauge needle (Orotracheal
injection set). Since hyaluronic acid is usually highly viscous
and consequently offers a certain resistance when injected
using a small gauge needle, we developed a metal
plunger that makes it possible to exert adequate pressure
that can be varied during the injection (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1.
Syringe with a particular metal plunger that makes it possible to exert
adequate pressure that can be varied during the injection.
Deferred rehabilitation surgical procedures secondary
to cordectomy can be performed using injective laryngoplasty,
using biological materials (autologous fat, bovine
collagen, homologous collagen, hyaluronic acid) or
synthetic materials (polydimethylsiloxane – PDM S) and
with structural surgery -. Whereas fat, collagen and
hyaluronic acid can change in volume over time, due to
partial reabsorption, PDMS is stable and non-reabsorbable.
The main problem related to injective laryngoplasty
is the impredictability of the size of volume increase in
the neocord and the homogeneity of the distribution of
the material, as these two factors depend on the distendibility
of the scar tissue.In the case of a neocord that is small and/or very close
to the thyroid cartilage, and that cannot therefore be enlarged
by injection, type I thyroplasty must be performed,
using the Goretex technique that allows a gradual detachment
of the perichondrium and simultaneous medialisation
of the neocord. Goretex thyroplasty is preferable to techniques using implants because it is modulable and
presents less risk of extrusion. In the case of procedures
involving the commissural region or the juxta commissural
one, the neocord can be inexistent with the newly
formed perichondrium particularly close to the cartilage.
This results in marked anterior glottic insufficiency that
cannot be solved either with endoscopic enlargement
or by external medialisation. In such situations, Zeitels
et al. suggested a laryngoplasty of the anterior commissure
that can be integrated with an injective method on
the rear two-thirds of the neocord .In the event of supraglottic false cord compensation, if
this is adequate and the voice intense enough, particularly
in male patients, voice surgery could take the form
of helping the ventricular bands to meet (injective laryngoplasty).
If glottic compensation is believed to be more
favourable and feasible, it is achieved by laser resection
of the false cords and surgical rehabilitation of the glottic
level. When arytenoepiglottic compensation occurs,
replacement, if deemed to be advantageous, will involve
partial laser resection of the arytenoid hood or of the
aryepiglottic fold and voice surgery treatment of the
glottic level. In some cases, dysphonia occurs secondary
to the formation of scar tissue in the anterior commissure.
The surgical solution can either be a resection
of the anterior scarring with application of mitomycin (Fig. 2) in an attempt to avoid relapses or reconstruction
of the commissure using a flap of adequately deepithelised
scar tissue and thinned and fixed with interrupted
stitches on to the upper face of one of the two
vocal cords, following removal by laser vaporisation of
the mucosal coating (Fig. 3).
Fig. 2.
Resection of the anterior scarring with application of mitomycin.
Fig. 3.
Reconstruction of the commissure using a flap of adequately deepithelised
scar tissue and thinned and fixed with interrupted stitches on to
the upper face of one of the two vocal cords, following removal by laser vaporisation
of the mucosal coating.
Supraglottic laryngectomies
Functional problems are almost exclusively related to cases
of supraglottic laryngectomy extended to the arytenoid
and the vocal cords, however “classic” procedures can
present sequelae if the motility of one or both arytenoids
is compromised, if mucosal flaps compromise respiratory
tract patency, due to a reduced sensitivity that does not allow
an efficacious adductory reflex of the vocal cords. The
coexistence of these factors will worsen the dysphagia. In
the case of breathing difficulties, the microlaryngoscopic
approach using a laser technique will make it possible, either
through the resection of the mucosal flap or performance
of a rear cordotomy to restore respiratory tract patency
and to remove of the tracheostomy tube. If one side
of the larynx is immobile or one vocal cord absent, glottic
insufficiency will be corrected by injective laryngoplasty
using the same technique as for laryngeal monoplegia .
Botulinum A toxin or cricopharyngeal myotomy may be
considered in cases of sensitivity deficits and/or abnormal
cricopharyngeal tone.
Subtotal laryngectomies
In the case of subtotal laryngectomies, the most frequent
complication from a functional point of view is the persistence
of swallowing problems of varying importance,
characterised by a risk of bronchopulmonary infection or
cause discomfort while eating (need for accentuated facilitating
postures during swallowing, sudden coughing,
stagnation of foods causing numerous rasps or need to
perform liberating manoeuvres of various types) with consequent
difficulties eating certain foods and a tendency to
avoid social events . Dysphagia is often directly related
to poor compensation voice sonority, as both swallowing
and voice are conditioned by the sphincteric capacity
of the cricoarytenoid unit. However, functional failure is
sometimes of the respiratory type, making it impossible to
decannulise patients.The main causes of neoglottic insufficiency are: ankylosis
or arytenoid paralysis, backward displacement of the
cricoid in relation to the hyoid bone, morpho-functional
deficiency of the base of the tongue, however deglutition
can also be compromised by other situations, such
as: sensitivity deficit of the pharyngeal mucosa and/or
neoglottis, preventing the triggering of the pharyngeal
phase and the adductory laryngeal reflex; increase in
crico-pharyngeal tone or narrowing due to scarring of the mouth of the oesophagus, which by slowing down
the pharyngeal phase of swallowing prolong contact between
the bolus and the neoglottic aditus, thus increasing
the risk of post-deglutition aspiration; presence of
atonic piriform fossae or scarring roughness that cause
bolus stagnation, leading to a prolonged feeling of presence
of a foreign body and constituting a cause of postdeglutition
aspiration; separation of the reconstruction,
a factor that is particularly important in the absence of
the epiglottis since moving the neoglottis away from the
hyoid bone vanquishes the protective mechanism of the
base of the tongue and compromises the efficiency of
arytenolingual compensation, due to the formation of a
recess between the hyoid bone and cricoidcartilage at the
point in which the arytenoid usually comes into contact
with the base of the tongue. It must not be forgotten that,
particularly in elderly patients, it is possible that a bone
spur (DI SH syndrome), may compress the oesophagus,
constituting an obstacle to the progression of the bolus,
which thus becomes an important concomitant cause of
postoperative dysphagia, an eventuality that should be
explored with a preoperative l-l projection x-ray of the
cervical spine.The main causes of respiratory impairment are: persistence
of oedema or arytenoid mucosal flap, stenosis of the
neoglottis due to membranous or structural causes due to
the collapse of the cricoidcartilage (fracture caused by
reconstruction traction or chondritis sequelae), forward
displacement of the cricoid due to incorrect reconstruction
alignment.Video fibroendoscopy is the fundamental technique for
the diagnostic approach to these problems, as it is able to
document the anatomic and functional situation, in addition
to a sensitivity test and, using boli of varying textures,
provides an assessment of deglutition (FEES) that, in the
presence of a tracheotomy can also be completed with a
hypoglottoscopic examination .The fibroendoscopic examination of swallowing is irreplaceable
also for preoperative planning of a surgical correction
by injective laryngoplasty in direct microlaryngoscopy,
as during the procedure it is not possible to predict
the injection points that will make it possible to correct
the disorder. During fibroscopy, an expert eye is able to
guess the presence of a reconstruction separation (Fig. 4)
requiring confirmation using a X-ray study: a laterolateral
projection X-ray of the cervical spine (Fig. 5) and CT of
the larynx with 3D reconstructions (Fig. 6), which is also
useful for identifying any cervical bone spurs.
Fig. 4.
Fibroendoscopy showing a reconstruction separation.
Fig. 5.
Laterolateral projection
X-ray of the cervical
spine.
Fig. 6.
CT of the larynx with
3D reconstructions.
Video fluoroscopy can be used as a complement to FEES
to document the extent of inhalation with the various barium
textures, to identify crico-pharyngeal hypertone or
scarring stenosis.Rehabilitation surgery is performed via the cervicotomy
route (reconstruction review and cervical spinal surgery
for Forestier’s syndrome), direct suspended microlaryngoscopic procedures (laser resection of the arytenoid mucosal
flap or membranous stenosis, laser myotomy of the
crico-pharyngeal muscle and injective laryngoplasty), fibroendoscopic
arytenoid augmentation.Reconstruction review can correct situations of separation
and anterior or posterior cricohyoid misalignment and
membranous and cartilaginous stenosis, cervical spine
surgery with prevascular access makes it possible to eliminate
compression on the oesophagus by filing the bone
spurs. In direct microlaryngoscopy, as well as recanalisation
of the respiratory tract, augmentation techniques can
be used to reduce or eliminate neoglottic insufficiency and
to exclude or minimise any scarring furrows responsible
for food stagnation.The materials that can be used, depending on the infiltration
site, are shown in Figure 7. Our experience
is based on the use of Vox-Implants (Uroplasty, Inc.),
whose injection site stability and absence of reabsorption
allow a stable result. This product is constituted by a
suspension of PDMS grains with a diameter of between
100 and 200 mm in a polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) that
acts as a thinner and carrier. The PVP is subsequently
reabsorbed by the lymphoreticular system, whilst the
particle of PDMS, thanks to their size and superficial
texture, which leads to the formation of a connective
lattice, do not migrate. The injection system is constituted
by a gun whose plunger progresses in steps, each
time the lever is pressed. It adapts perfectly to the syringe
containing the material and the Luer Lock type
connection constitutes a solid graft with the needle in
the pack. It is malleable enough to be shaped so as to
allow the surgeon optimum surgical field visibility and
correct needle tip direction, which is essential for positioning
the implant correctly.
Fig. 7.
Materials that can be used depending on the infiltration site.
The injection sites are indicated in Figure 8. In general, 2
or 3 cc of PDMS only are used.
Fig. 8.
Injection sites.
One of the sites that most often requires intervention is the
front part of the neoglottis in correspondence to the cricoid
ring and/or adjacent base of the tongue. Also in the case of
a cricohyoidoepiglottopexy, an injection at the base of the
tongue can be useful for positioning the suprahyoid epiglottis
further back. The aim of the injection here is to reduce
the anteroposterior gap caused by incomplete contact
between the arytenoid(s) and the base of the tongue or the
laryngeal face of the epiglottis. Another important injection
site is the lateral side of the neoglottis to overcome the lateral
gap that is sometimes present either on the side of the
removed arytenoid or because the preserved arytenoid tilts
without performing any forward sliding movement. The
lateral part of the neoglottis can constitute an inhalation site
when the piriform fossa is absent, atonic or scarred. This
situation, and even scarring furrows that may form in other
sites adjacent to the neoglottic aditus constitute the ideal
condition for post-deglutition inhalations.It is important not to overcorrect as the material cannot be
reabsorbed and the increase in volume obtained is stable.
The quantity to be injected must be carefully evaluated to
avoid an excessive reduction in lumen taking into consideration
also a possible mild post-operative oedema that
can be avoided by administering cortisone therapy on the
day of the procedure. The presence of the anaesthetic tube
preserves the calibre, which avoids the risk of an excessive
reduction in respiratory tract patency. During infiltration,
it is appropriate to make sure that adequate filling
occurs. An absence of filling suggests that the material
has been introduced too deep or that the material is sliding
towards sites of lesser tissue resistance with a consequent
inefficacy of the procedure. Lastly, it should be remembered
that excessively superficial infiltration, particularly
under pressure, can cause later extrusion, thus vanquishing
the results obtained. It can be necessary to intervene
in steps, particularly when scar tissues do not allow the
first injection to infiltrate an adequate quantity of material
and obtain the volume increase needed to correct the functional
disorder. Some Authors use the fibroendoscopic
approach using instruments that bend with the operational
channel, allowing the introduction of a 25-gauge needle.
This technique makes it possible to intervene almost exclusively
on the arytenoid hood and the material currently
used is collagen, which requires a thin needle for injection.
Although as a material, fat is suitable for this area, it
requires a larger infiltration needle, to dispense the pressurised
substance easily.
In patients with hypertonic oesophageal mouths or with
a pharyngeal phase slowdown, botulinic toxin can be
injected into the cricopharyngeal muscle or a myotomy
performed. Both procedures can be performed either endoscopically
or via the external route -.
Authors: A Ricci Maccarini; M Stacchini; D Salsi; F Pieri; M Magnani; D Casolino Journal: Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital Date: 2007-12 Impact factor: 2.124
Authors: A Ricci Maccarini; M Stacchini; D Salsi; D Padovani; F Pieri; D Casolino Journal: Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital Date: 2007-12 Impact factor: 2.124
Authors: G Bergamini; M Alicandri-Ciufelli; G Molteni; D Villari; M P Luppi; E Genovese; L Presutti Journal: J Voice Date: 2009-01-29 Impact factor: 2.009