Does Surgery Without Lugol’s Solution Pretreatment for Graves’ Disease Increase Surgical Morbidity?

Background Total thyroidectomy can be performed for Graves’ disease after a euthyroid state is achieved using inhibitors of thyroid hormone synthesis (thioamides). However, hypervascularization of the thyroid gland is associated with increased hemorrhage risk, in addition to complicating identificat...

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Veröffentlicht in:World journal of surgery 2018-07, Vol.42 (7), p.2123-2126
Hauptverfasser: Mercier, Frederic, Bonal, Mathieu, Fanget, Florian, Maillard, Laure, Laplace, Nathalie, Peix, Jean-Louis, Lifante, Jean-Christophe
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Total thyroidectomy can be performed for Graves’ disease after a euthyroid state is achieved using inhibitors of thyroid hormone synthesis (thioamides). However, hypervascularization of the thyroid gland is associated with increased hemorrhage risk, in addition to complicating identification of the recurrent laryngeal nerve and parathyroid gland. Saturated iodine solution (Lugol’s solution) has been recommended to reduce thyroid gland hypervascularization and intraoperative blood loss, although this approach is not used at our center based on our experience that it induces thyroid firmness and potentially hypoparathyroidism. Methods This retrospective single-center study evaluated patients who underwent total thyroidectomy for Graves’ disease between November 2010 and November 2015. The rates of various complications at our center were compared to those from the literature (e.g., cervical hematoma, hypocalcemia, and recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy). Results Three hundred and eighty consecutive patients underwent total thyroidectomy without preoperative Lugol’s solution (311 women [81.84%] and 69 men [18.16%], mean age 43.41 years). No postoperative deaths were reported, although 30 patients (7.89%) experienced recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy and 9 patients experienced permanent injuries (2.37%). Hypoparathyroidism was experienced by 87 patients (25.53%) and 14 patients experienced permanent hypoparathyroidism (3.68%). Four patients required reoperation for cervical hematoma (1.05%; 2 deep and 2 superficial hematomas). Conclusion Despite the recommendation of iodine pretreatment, few of our non-pretreated patients experienced permanent nerve injury (2.37%) or permanent hypoparathyroidism (3.68%). These results are comparable to the outcomes from the literature. Randomized controlled trials are needed to determine whether iodine pretreatment is necessary before surgery for Graves’ disease.
ISSN:0364-2313
1432-2323
DOI:10.1007/s00268-017-4443-3