Morbidity after reoperation for persistent or recurrent primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) is higher than after primary surgery. According to our experience, there is a contrast between postoperative normalization of laboratory parameters and the quality of life/patient satisfaction after reoperation. Therefore the aim of the study was to analyze the outcomes of reoperations in comparison to primary surgery. We evaluated the patients' reported quality of life using the SF-36 (an accepted health status assessment tool) and complete prospectively documented perioperative and follow-up data including postoperative complications. Additionally, we searched for reasons why primary surgical intervention did not succeed. In a prospective cohort study the perioperative data of 653 consecutive patients with pHPT, including 75 reoperated patients (11.5%) who underwent parathyroidectomy between 1987 and 1999, were evaluated by uni- and multivariate analysis. At a median 78 months (6-156 months) postoperatively, all patients underwent a planned follow-up that included the SF-36, physical examination, and laboratory investigations. A total of 51 reoperated patients were available for follow-up. Postoperative alleviation of symptoms or being symptom-free was reported by 70.6%. Patients after reoperation had lower SF-36 scores in all health domains postoperatively than patients after a primary operation. Of the reoperated patients, 19.6% stated that after evaluating the development of their complaints they would not consent to reoperation again. Subgroup analysis showed that 80% of patients with postoperatively persistent pHPT, 60% of those who did not observe symptom alleviation, and 44% of those after sternotomy were in the group of dissatisfied patients. Surprisingly, none of the patients with more than one reoperation, only two of the five patients with permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve injury, and only one of the four patients with persistent hypoparathyroidism were dissatisfied overall. Parathyroidectomy resulted in normocalcemia in 90.2% of the reoperated patients, with an operative morbidity of 27.4% and no mortality. After an unsuccessful operation for pHPT, patients should be treated at an expert center to avoid persistent hypercalcemia. Reoperations necessitating sternotomy should be restricted to patients with severe symptoms and signs.
Lateral sphincterotomy leads in most cases to quick healing of the chronic fissure in ano with a low recurrence rate. The added effect of degenerative changes was observed to be linked, however, with a higher long-term rate of anal incontinence.
For clinical controls before and after parathyroidectomy and for evaluation of the function of transplants of parathyroid tissue, it is necessary to establish standard values of relevant laboratory parameters for donor and recipient animals as well as for different types of nutrition. Since no such data are yet available, it was the purpose to define such standards. In a prospective randomized trial on 400 rats of the Dark Agouti (DA) and Lewis strain, different functional laboratory parameters such as total calcium, intact parathyroid hormone, phosphate, 1.25-dihydroxyvitamin D, and alkaline phosphatase were measured under a standard and low calcium diet over a period of 40 weeks. Two hundred of these animals underwent a parathyroidectomy four weeks after the beginning of the study and specimens were evaluated histologically. For all eight different study groups normal values could be defined within tight limits for parameters which describe the function of the parathyroid gland or elements of calcium metabolism under different conditions. The optimal conditions for a transplantation model of parathyroid glands were established. Lewis-rats were identified as the ideal donor and DA rats as the better recipient animals. These data can serve as reference values for future studies on transplantation of the parathyroid without immunosuppression.
In most of our patients (11 out of 13) the carcinoma was clinically predominant and discovered before the NETGI. Thus, a special follow-up looking for a carcinoma is probably not mandatory after the diagnosis of an NETGI.
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