Head & Neck Surgery 2024 Summary PDF
Document Details
Uploaded by KeenPlutonium7276
2024
Tags
Related
- Bailey's Head & Neck Surgery Otolaryngology Volume 1 PDF
- Pulsatile Tinnitus: Contemporary Assessment and Management PDF
- Pulsatile Tinnitus: Contemporary Assessment and Management PDF
- PCC SOM Surgery 2: Disorders of the Head & Neck PDF
- Head & Neck Surgery 2024 Summary (Part 2) PDF
- Cummings Review of Otolaryngology 1st Edition PDF
Summary
This document provides a summary of Head & Neck Surgery for 2024. The content details the introduction to the thyroid gland, including its arterial and venous supply, lymphatic drainage, and associated nerves. It also discusses different types of goiters and their associated symptoms, along with imaging techniques.
Full Transcript
# Head & Neck Surgery 2024 Summary ## Chapter 1: Thyroid Gland Introduction - Extension of lobe from oblique line of thyroid cartilage above to 6th tracheal ring below. - Isthmus overlies tracheal rings number 2 to 4. ### Zuckerkandl nodule: - **Def:** lateral hump in Middle of the thyroid lobe...
# Head & Neck Surgery 2024 Summary ## Chapter 1: Thyroid Gland Introduction - Extension of lobe from oblique line of thyroid cartilage above to 6th tracheal ring below. - Isthmus overlies tracheal rings number 2 to 4. ### Zuckerkandl nodule: - **Def:** lateral hump in Middle of the thyroid lobe - **Importance:** hides recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) behind it, making its dissection more difficult. ### Arterial Supply 1. **Superior thyroid artery:** from external carotid artery (ECA). - Accompanied by external laryngeal nerve. 2. **Inferior thyroid artery (ITA):** from thyrocervical trunk, of first part of the subclavian artery. - It is The main arterial supply. - The ITA is closely related to the RLN 3. Esophageal and tracheal branches. 4. **Thyroidea ima artery:** 3% of people arises from the aortic arch - Enters the gland through the lower border of its isthmus. ### Venous Drainage: | Vein | Location | |---|---| | Superior thyroid vein | internal jugular vein (IJV). | | Inferior thyroid vein | left innominate vein | | Esophageal and tracheal branches | left innominate vein | | Thyroidea ima vein | | ### Lymphatic Drainage - LN in region VI and VII, III, IV, V, II and lastly I. ### Three deep fasciae: - **Pre-tracheal fascia:** directly envelopes the thyroid gland - Cause why thyroid gland moves with deglutition. - Helping factor in retro-sternal extension → superior mediastinum - **Berry's ligament:** postero-medial part is very tough and anchors the thyroid lobe into the trachea. It is called Berry's ligament. - **Importance:** hides RLN behind it just before entry of larynx. - carries a small artery and vein carefully controlled ## Nerves: 1. **External laryngeal nerve:** branch of superior laryngeal nerve of vagus. - **Site:** It is located in Joll's triangle. - **Supply:** cricothyroid muscle only intrinisic laryngeal muscle outside laryx. - **Injury:** while ligating the superior thyroid vessels - **Effect of injury:** Paralysis of ipsilateral cricothyroid (Tensor of vocal folds) - A. Fatigability of his voice. - B. Loses ability to produce high pitched sounds 2. **Internal laryngeal nerve:** a branch of superior laryngeal nerve. - **Supply:** Pure sensory nerve of larynx above vocal folds. 3. **Recurrent (inferior) laryngeal nerve (RLN):** Branch of vagus nerve. - **Supply:** mixed nerve. - A. motor to intrinsic laryngeal muscles except cricothyroid muscle. - B. Sensory to interior of the larynx below vocal folds - **Injury of RLN** |Injury|Partial|Unilateral|Bilateral|Complete| |---|---|---|---|---| |Dyspnea|Stridor|||| |||||hoarseness of voice|Aphonia| ## Imaging ### INVESTIGATIONS 1. Plain X-ray neck and upper chest: Soft tissue shadow (retrosternal goiter-RSG) 2. Ultrasound (US) neck (the most important). - Diagnose cystic from solid nodules, detect clinically impalpable nodules, 3. Computed tomography (CT) neck: RSG, + cervical LNs. ### Others 1. Biopsy (FNAC or Tru-cut needle biopsy): in case of suspected malignancy. 2. Indirect Laryngoscopy (for assessment of the vocal cords). ### Common (Routine) Investigations 1. TSH, FT3 and FT4. 2. Thyroid auto-antibodies, if Hashimoto"s thyroiditis is to be excluded. 3. US + FNAC. 4. Thyroid tumor markers: Calcitonin for medullary cancer ## Chapter 2 ## Clinical Approach to Goiter - **Def:** enlarged thyroid gland irrespective of the cause or function. ### Characteristic Clinical Features of a Thyroid Swelling 1. **Anatomical site:** - Lower anterior part of the neck, deep to the sternomastoid muscle. 2. **Shape:** Butterfly; however, enlargement may be unilateral or asymmetrical. 3. **Mobility with deglutition:** A goiter moves up & down with deglutition. - NB: Move upwards with protrusion of the tongue: Thyroglossal cyst ### Clinical Types of Goiter (Causes of Thyroid Enlargement) | Type | Description | |---|---| | Simple Goiter | - Diffuse: <br> a) Physiological <br> b) Colloidal) <br> - Multinodular <br> - Solitary Nodule <br> - Recurrent Nodular. | | Toxic Goiter | - Diffuse (1) = Grave's Disease <br> - Multinodular (2) = Marine Lenhart Syndrome. <br> - Solitary Nodule = Plummer's Disease. <br> - Recurrent Nodular. | | Special Goiter | - Thyroiditis. <br> - Neoplastic: <br> a) Benign: Adenoma. <br> b) Malignant: 1 or 2. <br> - Autoimmune. <br> - Congenital (dyshormogenesis). | ### HISTORY-TAKING ### Personal History (Personal Data) - **Age:** - Young Age - Between 25-40 y - Between 30-45 y - Elderly - Physiologic goiter, papillary carcinoma. - SNG - 1 thyrotoxicosis. - 2 thyrotoxicosis. - Cancer of the thyroid. - **Gender:** - Females are more commonly affected with goiter than males. - Males are more affected with retro-sternal goiter and malignant solitary thyroid nodule. ### Symptoms (Complaints) - **A. Symptoms due to thyroid swelling** - 1 **Sudden appearance or rapid in size may be due to:** - A. Hemorrhage in a cyst or a necrotic nodule. - B. Rapidly growing carcinoma, or subacute thyroiditis. - 2 **Pain** = same causes of rapid enlargement - **B. Pressure symptoms:** - On 2 tubes (esophagus/trachea), 2 nerves (RLN/sympathetic trunk) & 2 vessels (carotid artery/IJV): - 1. **Dysphagia:** Because the thyroid has to be pulled upwards during swallowing. - 2. **Dyspnea:** pressure over trachea, (Retro-sternal or malignant) - 3. **Hoarseness of voice:** (RLN) affection in cancer. - 4. **Horner's syndrome:** cancer thyroid. - 5. **Dizziness & fainting attacks** (rare). - 6. **Congestion of the face**. ### Present History - **B) Progress** - Slowly-progressing - Rapidly-progressing - Self-limiting (within 1-3 m) - Restricted mobility - Harder in consistency - **Past History** - Similar condition: SNG may turn 2 ry toxic or malignant. - Intake of goitrogens e.g. drugs (Thiocyanates) or food (cabbage) - Previous irradiation of the neck: predispose to cancer thyroid. - Previous thyroid operation (Recurrence or fixation / limited mobility). - Family History: Goiter + deafness in Pendred's disease = hereditary goiter. ### CLINICAL EXAMINATION 1 **Heart rate and rhythm** | Condition | Description | |---|---| | Thyrotoxicosis | Tachycardia persists during sleep <br> < 90/min = mild, <br> 90-110/min = moderate. <br> > 110/min = severe | | Neurosis | Disappear during sleep | 2. **Temperature:** elevated in thyrotoxicosis. 3. **Blood pressure:** Systolic hypertension & ↑ pulse pressure in thyrotoxicosis 4. **Respiratory rate:** Dyspnea at rest: toxic heart failure or retro-sternal goiter. 5. **Head and Neck** - **Scalp and face:** Malar flush & scanty dry head hair (myxedema) 6. **The Eyes** - Horner's syndrome (ptosis, myosis, and enophthalmos) in thyroid cancer with infiltration of the cervical sympathetic trunk. - Look for signs of toxicity 1. Lid retraction (Dalrymple's sign) - Upper eyelid is higher than normal + No exophthalmos 2. Stellwag's sign - Staring look due to infrequent blinking 3. Lid lag (Von Graefe's sign) - The upper lid does not move downward with the moving eyeball. 4. Lack of convergence (Moebius sign) 5. Joffroy's sign: look upwards without wrinkling of the forehead). 6. Exophthalmos - The sclera becomes visible below or all around the iris. - **How to test???? Naffziger's Method:** - A. Stand behind the seated patient & tilt his head backwards.. - B. Eyeball appear before super-ciliary ridges. 7. Chemosis, Ophthalmoplegia and dilated congested conjunctival blood vessels, in severe thyrotoxicosis. 8. Tremors of the eyelids in semi-closed eyes. - **- Dullness over the manubrium (percussion) ………….. Retro-sternal goiter.** - **The Hands** - Moist and warm in thyrotoxicosis. - Fine tremors in thyrotoxicosis: - **Test:** Ask the patient to hold her arms out in front of her, elbows and wrists straight, fingers straight and separated. - **Lower Limbs** - Peri-tibial myxedema: Pitting with orange chins at the beginning, but becomes non-pitting later on, with deep purple chins - **What is Berry's Sign?** - Displacement of the carotid artery backwards and outwards by goiter. ### Signs of Retro-sternal Extension: - **History:** Postural dyspnea, stridor, cough, wheezing, choking, dysphagia, etc. - **Physical examination:** - 1. Dilated veins in front of the neck and sternum. - 2. Enlarged thyroid with non-visible lower border on swallowing (inspection). - 3. Impalpable lower border on palpation. - 4. Dullness on percussion over the manubrium sterni. - 5. Flushing of the skin & dilatation of the EJV during raising the arms or hyperextension of the neck (= Positive Pemberton' Sign). - 6. **Investigations** - a) Plain X-ray. - b) CT scan. - c) Thyroid scan. ### Point of difference | Feature | 1ry thyrotoxicosis | 2ry thyrotoxicosis | |---|---|---| | Age | Young adults | Older age groups | | Onset of toxic symptoms | Simultaneous with the swelling | Follows the swelling | | Eye signs | +++ | + | | Nervous manifestations | +++ | + | | Cardiovascular symptoms | +++ | + | | GIT manifestations | +++ | + | | Increased BMR | +++ | + | | The gland | Diffuse and smooth, symmetrical bilateral and fleshy | Nodular, asymmetrical and may be unilateral | ### Criteria | Feature | 1 Toxic (Grave's) | Colloid Goiter | Thyroiditis | |---|---|---|---| | Size | Slight to moderate | Moderate to gross | Small or moderate | | Surface | Smooth | Bosselated | Smooth | | Consistency | Soft-Fleshy | Fleshy | Hard | | Tenderness | - | - | - | | Bruit | + | - | - | ### Complications of multinodular goiter: 1- Toxicity 2- Malignancy 3- Retrosternal extension 4- Pressure 5- Cyst formation 6- Calcification 7- Hemorrhage 8- Infection is rare due to the extensive vascularity. ## Criteria of malignant transformation: | Criteria | Description | |---|---| | **Glandular criteria:** | | | Rapid growth | | | Fixation | | | Consistency is hard | | | Edge is ill-defined | | | Onset of pain | | | **Extraglandular criteria:** | | | Pressure (more evident) | | | Vocal cord paralysis (RLN) | | | Horner syndrome | | | Cervical lymph nodes | | | Unequal carotid pulsations | | | Distant metastases | | ## Chapter 3 ## Thyroid Tumors ### BENIGN TUMORS OF THE THYROID ### Pathological Classification: | Tumor Type | Description | |---|---| | **Epithelial Tumors** | | | Papillary adenoma (fetal or microfollicular adenoma). | | | Follicular adenoma (cystadenoma or colloid adenoma). | | | **Mesenchymal Tumors** | | | Lipoma | | | Leiomyoma | | | Hemangioma | | | **Other Tumors** | | | Teratoma (mainly in children). | | ### MLIGNANT TUMORS OF THE THYROID ### When to be Suspected? - enlarging painless lesion with one or more of the following: - Radiation exposure - Male gender, older age, younger age - Rapid ↑ in size - Previous thyroid cancer - Lymphadenopathy - Evidence of local invasion (vocal cord paralysis, dysphagia or firm, fixed nodules) ### Familial syndromes. ### Familial syndromes: Familial non-medullary thyroid cancer | Syndrome | Thyroid cancer | Description | |---|---|---| | Gardner syndrome | PTC | Intestinal polyps, osteomas, fibromas, lipomas | | Cowden syndrome | PTC - FTC | Breast cancer, hamartomas, pigmented adrenal nodules, Schwannoma | | Carney syndrome | PTC | Myoma, pituitary adenomas, testicular tumors | ### Incidence | Tumor Type | Incidence | |---|---| | Papillary | 80% | | Follicular | 15% | | Medullary | 2-10% | | Anaplastic | 5-15% | | Lymphoma | rare | | Metastatic | rare | ### Classification - **Differentiated tumors of follicular origin (90-95%):** Papillary carcinoma, follicular carcinoma, Hürthle cell carcinoma - **From parafollicular cells (2-10%):** Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) - **Poorly differentiated (5-15%):** Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) ### Oncogenes associated with Thyroid Carcinoma 1. RET oncogene: Papillary (PTC) & MTC. 2. Mutated RAS oncogene: Follicular thyroid carcinoma (FTC) 3. Mutated p53 gene: Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC). ### Incidence ### PAPILLARY THYROID CARCINOMA (PTC) - The most common histological variety of thyroid malignancy (80%) - Predominant thyroid cancer in children. - May be due to radiation exposure of the neck. - Age: Peak incidence is in the third decade of life. - Gender (Female: male = 3:1) ### Pathology - Complex papillary projections with a fibrovascular core. - **The hall mark** - A. Psammoma bodies (laminated calcified spheres) - B. Orphan Annie eye Nuclei or ground glass nuclei (nuclei that contain finely dispersed chromatin, optically clear or empty appearance) - The incidence of multi-focality is 80% - Spread to LNs in 30-50% of patients, → No effect on survival. - Hematogenous spread is late to lung & bones. ### Investigations - Ultrasonography (US) - Sonographic features that are helpful are: - 1. Calcifications: Thyroid microcalcifications, = Psammoma bodies - 2. Local invasion + LN metastases - Irregular margins + Heterogeneous echo-texture. - vascularity throughout the LN instead of normal central hilar vessels. - 3. Shape: Taller than it is wide - 4. Vascularity (color or power Doppler US): - The most common pattern: marked intrinsic hyper-vascularity, - 5. Hypoechoic solid nodule. - FNAC (specific and sensitive for PTC, MTC and ATC) - CT/MRI in patients with extensive local or sub-sternal extension ### Surgery - Hemithyroidectomy (lobectomy with isthmectomy): minimal PTC. - Total thyroidectomy if - (1) size >4cm. - (2) age (male >40 y, female >50y) +(3) Angio-invasion - Total thyroidectomy + Neck dissection if: metastatic cervical LNs ### Incidence ### FOLLICULAR THYROID CARCINOMA (FTC) - It is the 2nd common thyroid cancer (10%). - More frequent in I₂ deficiency areas - nodular goiter →neoplasm - Age: Mean age is 50 y - Gender: (Female: male = 3:1) ### The following features should be taken into consideration: 1. Occasional tumors are dominated by cells with abundant granular, eosinophilic cytoplasm (Hürthle cells). 2. Requires extensive sampling of the tumor-thyroid capsule → capsular or vascular invasion. 3. hematogenous spread is more common (bone, lung and liver). ### Diagnosis and treatment: - FNAC not helpful → R: lobectomy and isthmectomy. ### Both scoring systems have identified 2 distinct subgroups; | Feature | Low-risk group | High-risk group | |---|---|---| | Age | younger | older patients | | Metastas | Without distant metastasis | Distant metastasis | | Tumor type | Intra-thyroid follicular / papillary | Extrathyroid papillary/follicular | | Size | Tumors < 4cm in diameter | Tumors >4 cm | ### - Incidence: 3-5% ### HURTHLE CELL THYROID TUMOR - Gender: more in Male. - Origin: Derived from oxyphilic cells of the thyroid gland. - Spreads by lymphatics - Diagnosis: FNAC (20% malignant) - Often multifocal and bilateral. - Treatment: - Total thyroidectomy + Modified radical neck dissection (if with palpable cervical LNs). ### MEDULLARY THYROID CARCINOMA (MTC) - Age: The peak incidence is at 50-60 years - Origin: parafollicular or C cells of the thyroid (neuroectodermal) - Secrets calcitonin (95%); 85% secrets carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) - Sporadic 90%: Uni-focal, usually at 45y, worse prognosis. - Familial 10%: Multifocal, usually 35 y, better prognosis, associated with: - 1. MEN IIA or Sipples' syndrome - (MTC, hyperplastic parathyroid and pheochromocytoma) - 2. MEN IIB (MTC, pheochromocytoma, ganglioneuromatosis and Marfan's syndrome) - Can secrete: - Calcitonin (95%), СЕА (85%). - SPREAD: - 1. Lymphatics (neck and superior mediastinum) - 2. Blood → liver, bone (osteoplastic) and lung - 3. Local invasion - Diagnosis: Serum calcitonin, CEA, - Treatment - FNAC: characteristic amyloid stroma - Total thyroidectomy - MRND: - Palpable cervical LN, tumor >2cm →chance of 60% nodal metastasis is - o All patients should be screened for pheochromocytoma (MEN II) which - should be resected first. - Follow up: Serum Calcitonin / CEA level - Best → worst prognosis: - Familial non-MEN MTC → ΜΕΝ ΙΙΑ → sporadic cases → MEN IIB ### ANAPLASTIC THYROID CARCINOMA (ATC) - Incidence: An uncommon, affecting older patients - Origin: May arise in a well differentiated thyroid carcinoma - 80% a history of a long-standing goiter with sudden and rapid growth, - Treatment - 1. Tracheostomy and total thyroidectomy are extremely difficult ?? injury to neck structures - NB: Tissue diagnosis is needed to differentiate from lymphoma. - 2. External radiation may temporarily control the local effects of ATC. - 3. Limited effect of systemic chemotherapy (Adriamycin); no hormonal therapy - Prognosis is extremely poor + mean life expectancy of 6-9 months. Death occurs from local invasion of vital cervical structures + airway compression ### THYROID LYMPHOMA - Non-Hodgkin B-cell lymphoma - Hashimoto's thyroiditis is a risk factor - Treatment - 1. Chemotherapy / Radiotherapy - 2. Surgery: It is curative if limited to the thyroid gland only ### - Rare ### METASTATIC CARCINOMA - Hypernephroma is the most common primary site