Background: Hypocalcemia is the most common complication following total thyroidectomy. This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of perioperative combined calcium and vitamin D supplementation compared to postoperative combined calcium and vitamin D supplementation in reducing symptomatic hypocalcemia. Materials and methods: A prospective randomized placebo-controlled trial was carried out in patients undergoing total or completion thyroidectomy from June 2017 to May 2022. Eligible patients were assigned to receive either calcium carbonate and alfacalcidol or placebo 3 days before surgery, and both groups were given calcium carbonate and alfacalcidol for 14 days after surgery. Clinical outcomes (signs and symptoms of hypocalcemia, requirement of intravenous calcium, and medication-induced hypercalcemia) and laboratory results (calcium and parathyroid hormone levels) were compared between the two groups. Results: One hundred and thirty-four patients were included in the analysis, 68 were in perioperative oral calcium and vitamin D supplementation group, and 66 were in postoperative oral calcium and vitamin D supplementation group. Symptomatic hypocalcemia rates were significantly lower in the perioperative group than in the postoperative group (8.8 and 22.7%, respectively, P=0.033). All symptomatic hypocalcemia cases in the perioperative group occurred in the first 24 hours after surgery. Mean calcium levels were significantly higher in the perioperative group at 24 and 48 hours after surgery. Intravenous calcium requirement rate was lower in the perioperative group but the difference was insignificant (2.9 and 12.1%, P=0.053). Mean parathyroid hormone levels were within the normal range and did not differ between groups. No medication-induced hypercalcemia was detected in either group. Conclusion: Perioperative oral calcium and vitamin D supplementation significantly decreased the risks of symptomatic and biochemical hypocalcemia compared to postoperative oral calcium and vitamin D supplementation. The perioperative supplementation also shortened the recovery period of symptomatic hypocalcemia to within 24 hours.
Introduction Free flaps have been the preferred method for reconstruction after resection of oral cavity cancer. However, pedicled flaps remain valuable alternatives in appropriate settings. Objective The main objective of the present study was to compare surgical complications, hospital costs, and functional outcomes of oral cavity cancer patients who underwent soft tissue reconstruction with pedicled flaps or free flaps. Methods A total of 171 patients were included in the study. Ninety-eight underwent reconstruction with a pectoralis major, submental, temporalis, or supraclavicular pedicled flap, and in 73 patients, a radial forearm or anterolateral thigh free flap had been used. The cases were retrospectively reviewed, and a comparative analysis was carried out between the two groups. Results Recipient site and flap complications, speech, and swallowing functions did not differ between groups, but donor site complications, operative time, hospital stay, and costs were significantly reduced in the pedicled flap group compared with the free flap group. However, the pectoralis major flap reconstruction resulted in a more inferior swallowing function than the free flap reconstruction. Conclusions With comparable complications and functional outcomes, while decreasing in costs, pedicled flaps are a useful alternative to free flaps in oral cavity cancer reconstruction. However, in an extensive defect (> 70 cm2), free flaps are the reconstruction of choice for the preservation of swallowing function.
Objective: Temporalis myofascial flap is a good option for the reconstruction of maxillofacial, oral cavity, and parotid defect. Method: A total of 28 patients with postoperative defects located in the lower two thirds of the face and oral cavity in Chiang Mai University Hospital were included in this study. Results: Sixteen patients had nasal cavity and maxillary sinus cancer, 6 patients had oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer, 3 patients had parotid cancer, 1 patient had cementifying fibroma, 1 patient had facial palsy, and 1 patient had osteoradionecrosis of the mandible. Temporalis muscle flap provided profuse well-vascularized tissue for the obliteration of orbital exenteration and totalor partial maxillectomy cavities and coverage of the surface of sinonasal and oropharyngeal defects. Conclusion: Oral and nasal spaces were separated successfully in all patients. Temporalis muscle flap is a very reliable technique with low complication rates and few donor site problems. This safe and technically simple flap can be preferred for the reconstruction of maxilla-facial defects after ablative tumor surgery, especially in older and debilitated patients.
Background The aim of this study is to compare the oncological and functional outcomes of the submental island flap versus the radial forearm free flap used for oral cavity cancer reconstruction after minimizing differences in baseline characteristics. Methods Propensity scores for each oral cavity cancer patients who underwent surgical resection and immediate reconstruction with a submental island flap or a radial forearm free flap with a flap size ≤ 60 cm2 between October 2008 and December 2021 were generated based on the likelihood of being selected given their baseline characteristics. Patients were matched using a 1:1 nearest-neighbor approach. Results The final matched-pair analysis included 51 patients in each group. The 5-year overall survival, disease-specific survival, and locoregional control rates were 70.1% and 64.8% (p = 0.612), 77.3% and 83.7% (p = 0.857), and 76.1% and 73.3% (p = 0.664), respectively, for the submental island flap group and the radial forearm free flap group. Speech and swallowing functions were comparable between groups. However, there were significantly lower rates of complication associated with both donor and recipient sites in the submental island flap group and also the duration of hospital stay and hospital costs were significantly lower in these patients. A subgroup analysis of patients in which the reconstruction was carried out using the submental island flap procedure revealed that the presence of clinically and pathologically positive level I lymph nodes did not affect survival or locoregional control rates. Conclusions Although this study was not randomized, the matched-pair analysis of surgically treated oral cavity cancer patients showed that submental island flap reconstruction is as effective as radial forearm free flap reconstruction with regard to oncological and functional outcomes with lower complication rates, hospital stay, and hospital costs. This flap can be safely and effectively performed in selected cases with clinically and pathologically positive level I lymph nodes.
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