The buildings and materials in German military medical treatment facilities provide for excellent working conditions. The training programme for military surgeons in its end-2010 version has been designed specifically with data about injury pattern and non-battle diseases as well as the political situation and professional requirements in the civilian sphere in mind.
It was the purpose of this study to establish whether it is necessary to identify the recurrent laryngeal nerve intraoperatively when resecting the endemic nodular goiter. We prospectively formed two groups from 800 subtotal unilateral resections ("nerves at risk"). In group I (382 subtotal resections, 48.4%) the nerve was not identified intraoperatively. In group II (413 subtotal resections, 51.6%) the recurrent laryngeal nerve was routinely identified in all cases. The operative technique was standardized, giving special attention to the "anterior lamella". For all patients, preoperative and postoperative evaluation of the vocal cords was performed routinely. Altogether we saw 4 (0.5%) transient vocal cord palsies: 2 in group I and 2 in group II. All 4 laryngeal nerve palsies recovered within 4 months. These data demonstrated that no benefit is gained from routine dissection of the laryngeal nerve during resection of endemic nodular goiter. Therefore the demand for obligatory intraoperative identification of the recurrent nerve is not tenable.
The WSC course format was well received and perceived by learners as a valuable readiness platform. Ongoing evaluation of this course will enable data-driven evolution to ensure a maximum learning benefit for participants. With the increasing multinational nature of modern military missions, surgeons' training should follow international standards. Continuing evolution of military surgical training courses should further encourage the sharing and adoption of best educational practices.
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