Thyroid Surgery Nerve Injuries Recover Faster Than Expected
A study of nearly 4,000 thyroid surgeries found that temporary nerve damage occurs in about 2.7% of cases, but most patients regain normal vocal cord function within weeks. The findings could reassure hospitals about surgical safety and help surgeons predict recovery timelines for patients facing voice complications.
Originaltitel: A Study of Time to Recovery Following Loss of Neuromonitoring Signal of the Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve in Thyroid Surgery
ABSTRACT Background Injuries of the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) during thyroidectomy although infrequent can lead to major morbidity. Permanent RLN injury is uncommon; however, temporary neurapraxia and loss of signal (LOS) during intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM) are seen more frequently. This study aimed to identify factors associated with type I (segmental) and II (global) LOS of the RLN during thyroid surgery and to analyze time to recovery of vocal cord function. Methods This observational retrospective cohort study included 3806 patients (2924 female, 76.8% and 882 male, 23.2%) who underwent hemi or total thyroidectomy in a tertiary center between January 2015 and March 2021. Regression analyses determined factors associated with LOS. Postoperative fibreoptic laryngoscopy was used to measure time to recovery of vocal cord function. Results RLN LOS occurred in 167 (2.7%) of 5983 nerves at risk during surgery. The rate of Type I and Type II LOS per nerve at risk was 1.4% and 1.3%, respectively. Compared with an indication of malignancy, toxic nodule was associated with 96% increased odds of LOS independent of age and sex ( P < 0.001). Time to recovery was reduced for those with a Type II LOS (median 4 weeks) compared to Type I LOS (median 8 weeks and p = 0.04). Female sex and increasing age were independently associated with a longer duration to return of vocal cord function. Conclusions Time to recovery of RLN function is significantly reduced for patients with Type II LOS. Toxic thyroid nodules were associated with a higher risk of LOS, and female sex and age are significantly associated with a longer time to recovery.