
Post-thyroidectomy complications in southwestern Saudi Arabia: a retrospective study of a 6-year period
Author(s) -
Dauda Bawa,
Amal A. Alghamdi,
Hanan Albishi,
Nasser Al-Tufail,
Shashi Prabha Sharma,
Y. Khalifa,
Saleem Ahmed Khan,
Mohammed Alobeid Alhajmohammed
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
annals of saudi medicine/annals of saudi medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.373
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 0975-4466
pISSN - 0256-4947
DOI - 10.5144/0256-4947.2021.369
Subject(s) - medicine , thyroidectomy , recurrent laryngeal nerve , retrospective cohort study , thyroid , surgery , hypoparathyroidism , complication , palsy , superior laryngeal nerve , paralysis , vocal cord paralysis , larynx , alternative medicine , pathology
BACKGROUND: Thyroidectomy is the surgical removal of all or part of the thyroid gland for non-neoplastic and neoplastic thyroid diseases. Major postoperative complications of thyroidectomy, including recurrent laryngeal nerve injury, hypocalcemia, and hypothyroidism, are not infrequent. OBJECTIVE: Summarize the frequency of surgical complications of thyroidectomy. DESIGN: Retrospective. SETTING: Secondary health facility in southwestern Saudi Arabia. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We collected data from the records of patients who were managed for thyroid diseases between December 2013 and December 2019. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Complications following thyroidectomy. SAMPLE SIZE: 339 patients, 280 (82.6%) females and 59 (17.4%) males. RESULTS: We found 311 (91.7%) benign and 28 (8.3%) malignant thyroid disorders. Definitive management included 129 (38.1%) total thyroidectomies, 70 (20.6%) hemithyroidectomies, 10 (2.9%) subtotal thyroidectomies and 5 (1.5%) near-total thyroidectomies with 125 (36.9%) patients treated non-surgically. The overall complication rate was 11.3%. There were 4 (1.9%) patients with recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy, 16 (7.5%) patients with temporary hypoparathyroidism, 1 (0.5%) patient with paralysis of the external branch of the superior laryngeal nerve and 3 (1.4%) patients with wound hematoma. CONCLUSION: The rate of complications following thyroidectomy is still high. There is a need for emphasis on comprehensive measures to control the high rate of complications. LIMITATIONS: Retrospective design and no long-term follow up to monitor late complications. CONFLICT OF INTEREST: None.