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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During a follow-up of 11 years of thyroid carcinoma 136 patients were repeatedly examined. 43% papillary, 43% follicular, 11% anaplastic and 2% medullary carcinomas was found. The incidence of these types of carcinoma differed considerably; the frequency peak of papillary carcinomas was reached in 45-year-old humans, that of the follicular carcinomas in people aged 60, that of the anaplastic carcinomas in 70-year-old humans. 84% of the patients was female. Classification in pTNM-system: 8% in pT1, 27% in pT2, 12% in pT3 and 49% in pT4. Local and distant metastases were found at a low rate equally in pT1, pT2 and pT3; 26% of patients in pT4 had local metastases and 18% had distant ones in addition. There were 6 patients with metastases of a differentiated adenocarcinoma accumulating no 131-iodine and with no
thyroglobulin
in serum. 29% of patients had after thyroidectomy an unilateral
paresis
of the nervus recurrens and 4% a bilateral one. 26% of patients had a permanent hypoparathyroidism after thyroidectomy.
...
PMID:Thyroid carcinoma: a follow-up study of 11 years. 368 51
None of the 335 patients thyroidectomized for hyperthyroidism in our department of surgery between 1972 and 1982 died as a consequence of the operation. Reassessment of 226 of these patients by questionnaire 68 +/- 25 (SD) months after thyroidectomy revealed the following complications: postoperative
paresis
of the recurrent nerve (9%), persistent change of voice (2%), and persistent hypoparathyroidism (3.5%). 91 patients underwent a follow-up investigation 74 +/- 33 months after thyroidectomy. Only one had recurrent hyperthyroidism but 6 had a recurrence of the goiter. Patients with recurrent goiters had a significantly higher frequency of increased serum
thyroglobulin
levels than patients without goiters. These results emphasize the effectiveness of surgical therapy in hyperthyroidism, and suggest that serum
thyroglobulin
might be a useful predictor for goiter recurrence.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of hyperthyroid struma: surgery results, postoperative long-term course and study of a factor connected with recurrences]. 384 Jun 5
Treatment options in patients with bone metastases of differentiated thyroid carcinoma are limited and mostly aimed at palliation. Conventional treatment modalities are: radioiodine therapy, surgery or external irradiation. A lesser known option is selective embolization of tumour metastases. During selective catheterization of the arteries that feed the metastases embolization material (e.g. polyvinyl alcohol particles) is injected into the local vasculature under radiographic control. The embolization is immediately evaluated angiographically. This therapy was used in three patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma, a 60-year-old man suffering from back ache,
paresis
and afterwards paralysis of the lower body parts with incontinence, and in two women aged 59 years (suffering from diplopia and a pelvic metastasis) and aged 27 years (suffering from neurological symptoms or pain of the right leg due to a pelvic metastasis). In all three the symptoms disappeared after the embolization and ensuing treatment with radioactive iodine. Due to recurrent increase in serum
thyroglobulin
concentration repeated re-embolization was necessary, but during a follow-up period of 3-5 years the palliation remained adequate. Selective embolization appears to be a safe and efficacious treatment, with good tolerability for the patient. Embolization alone or preferably preceded by radioiodine therapy may lead to decreased tumour progression and often gives rise to immediate relief of symptoms.
...
PMID:[Embolization of skeletal metastases in patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma]. 1092 50
Recurrent differentiated thyroid carcinoma can easily be detected by means of ultrasound (US) and
thyroglobulin
, and often requires further surgical intervention. Revision surgery is often a technical challenge with significant risk of complications, considering the altered anatomy, with a possibility of leaving behind residual neoplasm. Preoperative US-guided tattooing localization has been introduced to reduce and prevent these potential problems during revision surgery. Encouraging results have been reported in the literature. Under US guidance, the lesion is identified and 0.5-2 ml of colloidal charcoal is injected in its proximity using a 23 gauge needle. The extraction is accompanied by injection at constant pressure of charcoal in order to leave a trace of pigment along the path of the needle till the skin. From April 2008 to January 2016 we performed revision surgery in 27 patients for lymph-nodes metastasis in differentiated thyroid cancer, using the technique of preoperative charcoal tattoo localization. Our previous study on the first group of 13 patients published in 2012, reported the preliminary results in terms of success rate and complications. The tolerance of charcoal injection was good for all patients and the procedure was demonstrated to be useful, contributing to the removal of metastatic lesion in 93% of procedures. We have registered minor surgical complications during revision in the central compartment of the neck: Transitory hypoparathyroidism in 2 cases (11%) and transitory vocal cord
paresis
in 3 cases (16%). Based on these results, preoperative charcoal tattoo localization in revision surgery of the neck for differentiated thyroid cancer recurrence can be considered a safe technique, easy to perform, with low-costs and useful during surgical procedures, providing a significant reduction of iatrogenic damage and risks.
...
PMID:Preoperative charcoal suspension tattoo for the detection of differentiated thyroid cancer recurrence. 3100 12