A prospective study with subjective evaluation of shoulder pain and objective evaluation of shoulder muscle strength by isokinetic testing and electromyographic and electroneurographic studies of spinal accessory nerve function was performed on patients who had undergone neck dissection procedures. Twenty-one patients with head and neck cancer were enrolled in this study. Three types of neck dissection were performed: 7 selective neck dissections, 9 modified radical neck dissections, and 5 radical neck dissections. All patients who underwent radical neck dissection had shoulder pain, and 80% of them had shoulder droop after the operation. In the patients who underwent selective neck dissection, the electromyographic findings of the spinal accessory nerve were relatively normal. Their shoulder strength was sometimes decreased at I month after operation, but it had returned to preoperative strength by the 6-month follow-up visit. These findings suggested that patients who underwent selective neck dissection had the least damage to spinal accessory nerve function and the least shoulder disability after neck dissection.
Persistent osteoradionecrosis, despite diligent radical treatment, raises the suspicion of recurrent cancer. Extensive osteoradionecrosis with a multiple discharging fistula, a large area of exposed necrotic bone, or a coexistent fracture should be treated primarily with radical sequestrectomy and microvascular free flap reconstruction. Surgery still plays a major role in controlling osteoradionecrosis, and hyperbaric oxygen therapy is adjuvant.
This aggressive neoplasm may cause only a few, unremarkable symptoms and masquerade as a supraglottic cyst. Endoscopic CO2 laser surgery can be used to resect this uncommon tumor, with oncologically sound results and without surgical morbidity.
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