Background: Several diagnostic and therapeutic processes are regulated by guidelines and recommendations provided by International and National Societies which offer standardized indications for health-care practitioners, including the treatment of pathologies that may affect the thyroid gland.These documents are very important for patient health promotion and, also, for preventing adverse events associated with patient injuries and related malpractice litigations. Particularly, thyroid surgery can be a cause of professional liability due to complications from surgical errors. Even if the most frequent complications are hypocalcemia and recurrent laryngeal nerve injury, this surgical specialty can be also burdened by other rare and serious adverse events such as esophagus lesions.Case Description: Here a case of alleged medical malpractice involving a 22-year-old woman reporting a complete esophagus section during thyroidectomy was described. The case analysis highlighted that the surgical treatment was performed for an unconfirmed Graves-Basedow disease which was then assessed as Hashimoto thyroiditis by histological exam of the removed gland. The esophagus section was treated by termino-terminal pharyngo-jejunal anastomosis and termino-terminal jejuno-esophagus anastomosis. The medico-legal analysis of the case revealed two different profiles of medical malpractice related, respectively, to the misdiagnosis of the pathology due to an inappropriate diagnostic-therapeutic procedure and the production of the complete section of the esophagus, representing an extremely rare complication of thyroidectomy.Conclusions: Clinicians should ensure an adequate diagnostic-therapeutic path based on guidelines, operational procedures, and evidence-based publications. The non-observance of the "required rules" for diagnosis and treatment of thyroid disease can be associated with a very rare and severe complication that strongly compromises the patient quality of life.
In 2-vessel coronary artery disease involving the LAD, MIDCAB alone achieves, in a substantial proportion of patients, functionally complete revascularization even in the nonrevascularized second vessel territory.
Figure 1. Coronary angiography revealing the large saccular aneurysm of the proximal circumflex coronary artery above the bifurcation of the first marginal branch.A 39-year-old female with no coronary risk factors was referred with an acute coronary syndrome and was found on coronary angiography to have a 2.5 × 3.5 cm saccular aneurysm of the proximal circumflex artery
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