Title of article :
VOICE DYSFUNCTION FOLLOWING THYROIDECTOMY
Author/Authors :
Ali, Nabil Benha University - Faculty of Medicine - Surgery Department, Egypt , Rashad, Hamed Benha University - Faculty of Medicine - Surgery Department, Egypt , Mitkees, Mohamed Benha University - Faculty of Medicine - Surgery Department, Egypt , Kamal, Mohamed Benha University - Faculty of Medicine - Surgery Department, Egypt , Al-Habaa, Gamal Benha University - Faculty of Medicine - Surgery Department, Egypt , Badawy, Ahmed Ministry of Health - General Surgery, Egypt , Ali, Abdullah Hearing Speech Institute, Egypt , Al-Sabbagh, Mohamed Poliomyelitis Institute - Neurophysiology Unit, Egypt
From page :
87
To page :
93
Abstract :
Aim: Voice dysfunction after thyroidectomy is not rare, and is generally reported in terms of recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) or superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) injuries. However, voice dysfunction can occur without laryngeal nerves injuries. Prompt recognition of causes of dysphonia is essential so that relevant therapeutic decision allows early management. The aim is to analyze voice change after thyroidectomy for patients with normal pre-operative voice. Methods: The study included 30 patients who had developed voice changes within 6 months after thyroidectomy. They were subjected to voice evaluation, indirect laryngoscopy, video stroboscopy and electromyography (EMG). Results: It was found that dysphonia after thyroid surgery was caused by neurogenic causes (RLN and SLN injuries) in 23 patients (76.7%), non-neurogenie causes in 5 patients (16.7%) and combined causes in 2 patients (6.6%). EMG studies revealed complete denervation in 6 patients (20%) and incomplete denervation (paresis) in 19 patients (63.3%). Conclusion: Post-thyroidectomy dysphonias are not rare. Injuries of the RLN constitute the main cause. Non-neurogenic injury is another contributing factor. Diagnosis is essential for early management through videostroboscopy and EMG which is specific to differentiate between neurogenic and traumatic injuries and to detect complete or incomplete denervation
Keywords :
Dysphonia , laryngeal nerves , Vocal folds dysfunction
Journal title :
The Egyptian Journal of Surgery
Journal title :
The Egyptian Journal of Surgery
Record number :
2579183
Link To Document :
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