Cancers (Oct 2021)

How the Severity and Mechanism of Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Dysfunction during Monitored Thyroidectomy Impact on Postoperative Voice

  • Tzu-Yen Huang,
  • Wing-Hei Viola Yu,
  • Feng-Yu Chiang,
  • Che-Wei Wu,
  • Shih-Chen Fu,
  • An-Shun Tai,
  • Yi-Chu Lin,
  • Hsin-Yi Tseng,
  • Ka-Wo Lee,
  • Sheng-Hsuan Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13215379
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 21
p. 5379

Abstract

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Intraoperative neuromonitoring can qualify and quantify RLN function during thyroid surgery. This study investigated how the severity and mechanism of RLN dysfunction during monitored thyroid surgery affected postoperative voice. This retrospective study analyzed 1021 patients that received standardized monitored thyroidectomy. Patients had post-dissection RLN(R2) signal 90% decrease from pre-dissection RLN(R1) signal were classified into Group A-no/mild, B-moderate, and C-severe RLN dysfunction, respectively. Demographic characteristics, RLN injury mechanisms(mechanical/thermal) and voice analysis parameters were recorded. More patients in the group with higher severity of RLN dysfunction had malignant pathology results (A/B/C = 35%/48%/55%, p = 0.017), received neck dissection (A/B/C = 17%/31%/55%, p p = 0.006), and had asymmetric vocal fold motion in long-term postoperative periods (A/B/C = 0%/8%/62%, p < 0.001). In postoperative periods, Group C patients had significantly worse voice outcomes in several voice parameters in comparison to Group A/B. Thermal injury was associated with larger voice impairments compared to mechanical injury. This report is the first to discuss the severity and mechanism of RLN dysfunction and postoperative voice in patients who received monitored thyroidectomy. To optimize voice and swallowing outcomes after thyroidectomy, avoiding thermal injury is mandatory, and mechanical injury must be identified early to avoid a more severe dysfunction.

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