Study Results
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Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
100 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2020-01-01
2021-07-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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One of the indices of success in thyroid surgery is the frequency of complications. The most frequent postoperative complications following thyroidectomy are hypocalcemia and airway complications. These are life threatening and have a significant impact on quality of life . Airway complications may result from postoperative haematoma, vocal cord paralysis, laryngeal oedema, and tracheomalacia .
Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy (RLNP) is a rare but potentially catastrophic complication of thyroid surgery. Damage to a recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) with resultant paralysis of the sole abducting muscle (posterior cricoarytenoid) of the vocal folds can cause symptoms ranging from hoarseness in unilateral lesions to stridor and acute airway obstruction in bilateral damage. RLNP following thyroid surgery is one of the leading reasons for medico-legal litigation against surgeons .
Injury of the laryngeal nerves may not be the only cause of voice changes. Other possible causes include injury of the prethyroid strap muscles and cricothyroid muscles or impairment of laryngotracheal movement due to wound contracture after surgical trauma of the soft tissues. A delicate surgical technique may prevent such complications, but it remains to be clarified whether voice alterations may occur after thyroidectomy without any laryngeal nerve injury. Computerized acoustic analysis of the patients undergoing thyroidectomy without laryngeal nerve injury may help determine possible voice changes objectively .
Dysphagia is a typical symptom experinced preoperatively by patients with enlarged thyroid due to a direct compression of the swallowing organs. In these patients, uncomplicated thyroidectomy often leads to improvements in perceptions of swallowing function. However impaired swallowing and neck strangling frequently occur postoperatively. Intraoperative nerve injury regularly causes postoperative dysphagia, but dysphagia is also complained of after uncomplicated thyroidectomies. These symptoms are usually dismissed by the clinicians or attributed to orotracheal intubation. In many patients, correlations for these swallowing disorders cannot be found in objective test results. Reasons for dysphagia and esophageal motility changes after uncomplicated thyroidectomy could be injury of the perithyroidal neural plexus, changes in the laryngeal vascular supply, postoperative adhesions, decreased pressure of the upper esophageal sphincter, or changed position after thyroidectomy .
Investigate non neurogenic causes of vocal and swallowing changes following thyroid surgery: Vocal cord immobility (VCI) is defined as various spectrum of motion impairment in the vocal cord. Although hoarseness is the main symptom in VCI, dysphonia, odynophonia, dysphagia, chronic cough, and laryngospasm can also occur. Visual inspection by a laryngoscopy and electrophysiologic study, such as laryngeal electromyography (LEMG) can help to differentiate the neurogenic and non-neurogenic causes of VCI. The LEMG technique was first introduced by Weddel et al., and needle electrode insertion in small muscles of larynx with assistance of laryngoscopy or in-surgery was first reported in 1950s, followed by the standardized percutaneous electrode insertion technique. LEMG is not only helpful in diagnosing neuromuscular disorder in the larynx, but it can also be used in botulinum toxin or hyaluronic acid injection in vocal cord. In the process of first diagnosing VCI, various systemic diseases can be suspected from the symptoms. Viral or bacterial infections can attribute to post-infectious neuropathies and a wide spectrum of malignancies or tumors present as a paralysis. Also, VCI can be seen in systematic neurologic diseases such as myasthenia gravis, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, and multiple sclerosis. With LEMG results, it aids to select other diagnostic tests and determine timing and type of treatments. Furthermore, LEMG results are useful in predicting negative outcomes and their findings can alter definitive treatments. It is important to diagnose VCI of neurogenic causes and to affect treatment and prognosis. However, there are few research studies regarding the association between the clinical characteristics in VCI and LEMG results .
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Thyroidectomy group
patient undergoing thyroidectomy for simple nodular goiter
Thyroidectomy
Thyroidectomy
Interventions
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Thyroidectomy
Thyroidectomy
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Assiut University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Aya Esam Sharkawy
resident doctor
Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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Phoniatrics unit 1/2019
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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