Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4109817 European Annals of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Diseases 2016 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

IntroductionSurgery is the only radical and definitive treatment for primary hyperparathyroidism. Exploration of the four parathyroid sites is giving way to minimally invasive techniques. The present study sought to compare two minimally invasive parathyroidectomy techniques, by classical cervicotomy (MIP-C) and by video-assistance (MIP-VA), in terms of success rate, complications rate, operating time, and patient and community physician satisfaction.Materials and methodA non-randomized retrospective comparative study included 112 patients presenting with primary hyperparathyroidism with identified parathyroid adenoma, operated on between January 2005 and October 2010. The two groups were constituted according to the surgeons’ habitual practice: 54 cases of MIP-VA and 58 of MIP-C.ResultsResults for MIP-VA and MIP-C were respectively: success, 96.3% vs. 100% (P = 0.09); mean scar size, 1.47 vs. 3.43 cm (P < 0.01); hypocalcemia, 2 vs. 3 cases (P = 0.1); theater time, 94.25 vs. 76 min (P = 0.02); and postoperative stay, 1.08 vs. 1.37 days (P = 0.07). Patient satisfaction was comparable between groups, while 93.3% of community physicians found MIP-VA preferable to MIP-C, although only 39.3% had known the MIP-VA technique.ConclusionWith efficacy, morbidity and patient satisfaction comparable to classical surgery, MIP-VA significantly reduced cervicotomy size and hospital stay. Community physicians considered it to be preferable to MIP-C.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Otorhinolaryngology and Facial Plastic Surgery
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