Results of Decompressions and Sutures of an Injured Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve
Markalous B., Svárovský J., Lašťovka M., Vohradník M., Jedlička I., Přeučil P.
ORL klinika 3. LF UK a FNKV, Praha, přednosta doc. Dr. med. MUDr. A. Hahn, CSc. ORL oddělení, ÚVN, Praha, zást. přednosty MUDr. M. Mikolaj Foniatrická klinika 1. LF UK, Praha, přednosta prof. MUDr. M. Lašťovka, DrSc. Endokrinologická ambulance, Praha |
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Summary:
The authors summarize the results of decompressions and sutures of the recurrent
laryngeal nerve injured during strumectomy in 21 patients (30 recurrent nerves used to bridge the
defect between stumps of the recurrent nerve without tension), 4 times they made an anastomosis
of the distal stump of the recurrent nerve with the r. descendens of the n. hypoglossi, in one instance
anastomosis of the recurrent nerve with the vagus (its distal cervical portion was resected on
account of a neurinoma propagating into Hashimoto’s goitre) and in one instance they sutured the
vagus using an autograft.
The authors’ experience is based on 807 thyroidectomies, where they visualize as a matter of routine
the recurrent nerve. Two decompressions and two successful peroperative sutures of the recurrent
nerve were made in the authors patients, the other revisions were referred from other departments.
Twelve times the paresis of the vocal cord was unilateral. Ten times a bilateral lesion was involved,
which called for urgent tracheotomy in nine patients due to severe inspiration dyspnoea with stridor.
Only one female patient with bilateral paresis of the vocal cords was able to avoid tracheotomy.
Localization of the nervous lesion regardless of the type of injury: 15 times the area of Berry’s
ligament. 7 times at the site of crossing of the recurrent with the lower thyroid artery, 4 times
caudally from the crossing of the n. recurrens with the lower thyroid artery and 4 times the nerve
was compressed by a tough modular goitre. The autors expressed the results objectively by laryn-
gostroboscopic examination and 7 times they used electromyography of the laryngeal muscles. EMG
examination correlated with the clinical finding.
The results of decompression and sutures of the recurrent nerve were very satisfactory in early
revisions, i.e. within 7 days after development of the lesion following strumectomy.
After early decompression in 11 patients the mobility of the vocal cord and phonation was restored
perfectly. In two instances only the adduction movement of the vocal cord was restored and the
occlusion of the intramembraneous rimae and voice improved. Decompression of the nerve com-
pressed by the goitre (clinically manifested by paresis of the vocal cord for several months) led three
times to improved mobility of the vocal cord by cca one third and to improvement of the voice. In
one instance this late decompression was not successful.
The results of early sutures of the recurrent nerve were very good. Ten times there was partial
adjustment of the adduction of the vocal cord, the phonation closure improved and there was
significant improvement of the voice. In one instance the suture failed (it may have been however
associated strain on the nerve at another site). In one instance the authors did not evaluate the
effect of laterofixation of the ipsilateral vocal cord which the patient refused to eliminate. Bilateral
suture of the nerve three months after development of the lesion was not a success.
All nine patients with bilateral paresis of the vocal cords were decannulated. The mean period before
decannulation was four months (range three weeks to one year). The prerequisite of decannulation
was an adequate width of the intermembraneous rima. In two patients the lumen of the larynx was
enlarged by chordectomxy and in one patient by chordedectomy with arytenoidectomy and insertion of a spacer from the thyroid cartilage into the anterior commissure.
The authors recommend laryngoscopic examination on the day after strumectomy and early
microsurgical revision of the injured recurrent nerve, preferably during operation or on the first
day after surgery, but not laster than after seven days. Early suture of the recurrent nerve is
considered the method of choice. If the surgeon visualized and saved the recurrent nerve during
surgery, possible paresis of the vocal cord improves as a rule spontaneously and revision is therefore
not necessary.
Phoniatric reeducation and possible phonosurgical surgery of the larynx are part of patient care in
injuries of the recurrent nerve.
Key words:
recurrent laryngeal nerve, injury, regeneration, suture of the nerve, thyroid gland,
strumectomy.
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