The goal of this study was to estimate the incidence of temporary and permanent unilateral recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis (URLNP) after esophagectomies with cervical anastomosis and to determine the impact of surgical technique, tumor type, tumor localization and age on the incidence of URLNP. From March 2002 to November 2009, 84 patients underwent a laryngoscopical evaluation before and after esophagectomy with cervical anastomosis prospectively. If the postoperative URLNP recovered within 6 months, the paresis was classified as transient; if not, it was defined as permanent. The results indicate that the overall incidence of postoperative URLNP was 50% (42/84). Twenty-four of the 84 patients (28.6%) showed a transient URLNP. A permanent URLNP was observed in 9 of the 84 patients (10.7%). The remaining 9 of the 84 patients (10.7%) were categorized as paresis with unknown clinical outcome due to missing follow-up. There were significantly more postoperative URLNPs in the group operated by transthoracic esophagectomy than by transhiatal esophagectomy (p < 0.001). Multifocal tumors and those localized suprabifurcational showed a higher incidence of postoperative URLNP than unifocal lesions with infrabifurcational localization (p = 0.046). Histological type of tumor and patients' age had no impact on URLNP. The high incidence of URLNP in our study underlines the high risk of URLNP after esophagectomy with cervical anastomosis, and consequently the importance of routine laryngoscopic pre- and postoperative evaluation of the vocal fold motility.
About 90 % of the current group of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma cancer patients presented large treatment needs, both in regard with caries and periodontal disease, about 20 months after cancer treatment.
Total laryngectomy is performed in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer stages and results in reduced quality of life due to the loss of voice and smell, permanent tracheostoma and occasionally dysphagia. Therefore, successful voice rehabilitation is highly beneficial for the patients' quality of life after surgery. Over the past decades, voice prostheses have evolved to the gold standard in rehabilitation and allow faster and superior voicing results after laryngectomy compared to esophageal speech. Polyspecies biofilm formation has become the limiting factor for device lifetimes and causes prosthesis dysfunction, leakage and in consequence pneumonia, if not replaced immediately. Although major improvements in prosthesis design have been made and scientific insight in the complexity of biofilm evolution and material interaction progresses, the microbial colonization continues to restrict device lifetimes, causing patient discomfort and elevated health costs. However, present scientific findings and advances in technology yield promising future approaches to improve the situation for laryngectomized patients.
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