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Thymectomy: its role in the management of myasthenia gravis
Author(s) -
O'Riordan J.I.,
Miller D.H.,
Mottershead J.P.,
Pattison C.,
Hirsch N.P.,
Howard R.S.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
european journal of neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.881
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1468-1331
pISSN - 1351-5101
DOI - 10.1046/j.1468-1331.1998.520203.x
Subject(s) - thymectomy , medicine , myasthenia gravis , thymoma , intensive care unit , surgery , intubation , atrophy , weakness , hyperplasia , anesthesia
The management and clinical course of patients with myasthenia gravis admitted to a neurological intensive therapy unit (ITU) for thymectomy over a 66 month period were reviewed. There were 53 patients, 20 male and 33 female, mean age 35.2 years (18–74) and median ITU stay of 5 days (2–30). Indications for thymectomy were thymic enlargement on computed tomography (34%), persistence of generalized symptoms (38%), a combination of both (20%), steroid side effects or dependency (4%) and progressive bulbar symptoms (4%). Following thymectomy, thymic histology revealed thymic follicular hyperplasia (26/53; 49%), atrophy (11/53; 21%), thymoma (12/53; 23%) and normal thymus (4/53; 8%). Post‐operatively 23% required prolonged intubation (> 48 hrs); two patients required a tracheostomy 10 and 13 days post‐operatively. Plasma exchange was required for two patients (3.8%) due to persistent severe myasthenic weakness. Three patients (6%) developed a post‐operative chest infection and one pseudomembranous colitis. There were no post‐operative mortalities during the study period. After 2 years, 35% of patients were in remission and 46% had ocular or mild generalized symptoms only. Thymectomy for myasthenia gravis is followed by sustained clinical improvement in the majority of patients. The appropriate post‐operative management of these patients is best undertaken in a specialized neuro‐intensive care setting.