Outpatient thyroidectomy is increasingly performed and reported. The senior author currently offers outpatient thyroidectomy for patients not requiring drain placement (smaller goiters without significant blood loss) and with postanesthesia care unit PTH levels of at least 30 pg/ml or with postanesthesia care unit PTH levels of at least 20 pg/ml with oral calcium supplementation.
Objective
There is no standard of care for treatment of pediatric acute mastoiditis (PAM). We systematically reviewed the English literature to evaluate the efficacy of PAM treatment options.
Methods
PubMed, Embase, MEDLINE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, and the Cochrane Library were searched from inception to January 2016, along with manual bibliography searches, for studies describing surgical or medical therapy. Two independent evaluators reviewed each abstract and article.
Results
We identified 310 articles, and 55 met inclusion criteria. Thirty‐three evaluated surgical options and included 2,930 patients (mean age = 2.8 years) including those with myringotomy ± tube placement (n = 920); 140 needed additional surgery, drainage of subperisoteal abscess (SPA) (n = 142) ± myringotomy or tube placement, 29 patients needed additional surgery and mastoidectomy ± myringotomy or tube placement (n = 612), with 611 reporting resolution. Using a random effects model, the estimated success probability with 95% confidence intervals (CI) are myringotomy ± tube placement 94% (95% CI: 84.5%‐97.8%), and drainage of subperiosteal abscess with concurrent myringotomy ± tube placement was 86.5% (95% CI: 66.4%‐95.4%). Using a random effects model, mastoidectomy success was 99.7% (95% CI: 77.5%‐100%). Nineteen studies evaluated medical therapy (n = 990 patients). The average cure rate was 71.7% (median = 70%; range, 26.3%–100%), and estimated success was 72.9% (95% CI: 60.5%‐82.5%) by meta‐analysis.
Conclusions
Myringotomy with or without tube placement and mastoidectomy have the highest cure rates for PAM. With SPA, incision and drainage with myringotomy with or without tube can be considered. Medical treatment cured nearly 72% of children. Ultimately, management should be based on surgeons' experience and judgment, patient characteristics, and severity of disease. Laryngoscope, 129:754–760, 2019
Objective: The objectives of this study are to evaluate incidence, duration, and quality of life (QOL) impact of early tympanostomy tube otorrhea and tube patency when comparing topical ciprofloxacin versus normal saline use in the perioperative period. Methods: Overall, 200 patients undergoing tube placement between November 19, 2015, and September 12, 2016, were randomized to intraoperative plus 5 days of either topical ciprofloxacin or normal saline. Parents or caregivers reported the incidence, duration, and QOL impact of early otorrhea via 4 weekly surveys. In addition, the patient’s otorrhea history and tube patency were evaluated at a 4- to 6-week postoperative visit. Results: Survey and in-office follow-ups were completed on 128 patients. The overall otorrhea incidence was 23.9% for normal saline and 16.7% for ciprofloxacin ( P = .32). The week-by-week otorrhea incidence was not statistically different. The percentage of days otorrhea was present, likewise, was not statistically different (normal saline 4.5%, ciprofloxacin 2.8%; P = .74). The QOL impact was not statistically different (normal saline 1.2, ciprofloxacin 1.5; P = .71). Tube patency was not statistically different, with only 1 of 280 ears occluded at follow-up. Conclusion: We find no difference in the incidence, duration, and QOL impact of early tympanostomy tube otorrhea or tube patency between ciprofloxacin and normal saline. This supports the option to substitute normal saline for ciprofloxacin in ears without an active ear infection at the time of tube placement, which would reduce both cost and unnecessary antibiotic use. Level of Evidence: 1b
Oropharyngeal stenosis is a potential complication of multilevel, single-stage upper airway surgery involving lingual tonsillectomy in children. Although there is pressure to perform multilevel procedures that address each site of upper airway obstruction in 1 sitting, this case series suggests the need for a more conservative, staged approach if lingual tonsillectomy is planned.
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