Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A comparison of direct, indirect, and fiberoptic laryngoscopy to evaluate vocal cord paralysis after thyroid surgery.
After thyroidectomy, the anesthesiologist usually performs a laryngoscopy to detect laryngeal edema and nerve palsies. The goal of this study was to compare three different methods of laryngeal examination after tracheal extubation of the patients. For that purpose, between 1990 and 1995, a prospective series of 1608 patients operated for thyroidectomy has been studied. ⋯ Finally, variations in monitored cardiovascular parameters were significantly lower with flexible and indirect laryngoscopies than with direct laryngoscopy. These mild variations induced by flexible laryngoscopy were well tolerated by patients with known cardiovascular diseases. Flexible laryngoscopy is the best method for an immediate laryngoscopic examination after thyroidectomy.
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The pathogenesis of the extrathyroidal manifestations of Graves' disease-ophthalmopathy and pretibial myxedema (Graves' dermopathy)-involves fibroblast activation and increased mucin (glycosaminoglycan) production. It is nuclear why fibroblasts are activated at these sites and evidence for site-specific and generalized fibroblast activation is conflicting. One previous report has demonstrated an increase in glycosaminoglycan deposition in the forearm skin of patients with Graves' disease but without pretibial myxedema. ⋯ Only 1 of 8 UG patients had multiple CR3/43 staining cells present in the dermis: 3 of 8 TG and 1 of 8 controls had a few CR3/43 stained cells. Overall we found no evidence of dermal mucin deposition in the forearms of 16 patients with Graves' disease and a similar GAG distribution to normal controls. HLA-DR expression by fibroblast-like cells in the dermis suggests activation of these cells in the dermis of the PTM specimens, but no evidence of widespread fibroblast activation was found in the forearms of patients with Graves' disease.