2018
DOI: 10.1002/lio2.171
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Staged Thyroidectomy: A Single Institution Perspective

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Cited by 18 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(90 reference statements)
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“…(14-17) Anaway, the routinary use of NIM has the enormous advantage to avoid bilateral palsy in case of loss of signal on the initial site, forcing to stop the operation. (18)(19)(20) After RLN palsy, the recovery of the nerve at one year is expected to be as high as 95% when the anatomic integrity is con rmed during the procedure. Consequently, the non-visualization of the nerve during dissection represents a striking risk factor for permanent damage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(14-17) Anaway, the routinary use of NIM has the enormous advantage to avoid bilateral palsy in case of loss of signal on the initial site, forcing to stop the operation. (18)(19)(20) After RLN palsy, the recovery of the nerve at one year is expected to be as high as 95% when the anatomic integrity is con rmed during the procedure. Consequently, the non-visualization of the nerve during dissection represents a striking risk factor for permanent damage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the other hand, the presence of cervical lymph nodes without a palpable tumour in the thyroid may be the first finding in thyroid carcinomas. Park and Min reported that they made a diagnosis from lateral neck nodes in a group of patients with nonpalpable thyroid carcinoma, and they performed near-total lobectomy + cervical lymph node dissection in some of these patients and only hemithyroidectomy in some of them (20). Likewise, other authors, who believe that small carcinomas of the thyroid may be more aggressive than palpable tumours, turned to additional neck dissections along with total thyroidectomy for these tumours (21).…”
Section: Discussion Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fact that the possibility of multicentric carcinoma increases the risk of subsequent local recurrence in the contralateral thyroid lobe and the expectation for a facilitating effect for ablation treatment when required after this approach is argued as the main indications for the method (22,23). The incidence of residual carcinoma in the contralateral lobe obtained with completion thyroidectomy was reported to be 28% by some authors and 27% by Rao et al (20)(21). Another author stated that the incidence of residual thyroid cancer in reoperation specimens was 31%, and they emphasised that completion thyroidectomy was an appropriate option for lesions larger than 1 cm in the first operation because 0% of these patients had the potential for residual cancer (22).…”
Section: Discussion Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only under exceptional circumstances, including advanced cancer, should contralateral surgery be pursued (36), and if so, solely at surgical centers experienced in complex neck surgery. Whenever the thyroid condition at hand is benign and not life-threatening, interests of patient safety should always take precedence over considerations of economy and convenience (37).…”
Section: Same-session Thyroidectomy Versus Staged Thyroidectomymentioning
confidence: 99%