Lung transplantation may be an option for unresectable or recurrent BAC confined to the lungs. Isolation of the diseased lungs and the use of cardiopulmonary bypass during surgery may be important in this disease and should be studied further.
A case is presented of a fifty-six year old man with a thyroid hemangioma presenting as a neck mass with tracheal deviation and unilateral vocal cord paralysis. A standard thyroid scan yielded equivocal findings. The diagnosis was determined preoperatively by the use of a 99m-technetium angiogram that disclosed the vascular nature of the lesion. Subsequent arteriography demonstrated the main arterial supply of the mass to be from both inferior thyroid arteries. Operative removal of the mass was accomplished through a standard transverse cervical incision. Pathologic study revealed that the vascular tumor involved both the surrounding normal thyroid parenchyma and also a microfollicular adenoma. This case points out the value of utilizing all available diagnostic means in atypical cases of thyroid disease.
The clinical value of the fine needle aspiration of thyroid nodules was evaluated by comparing preoperative cytology to subsequent pathology in 109 patients undergoing thyroidectomy. Preoperative cytology was reported as insufficient cellular material (31 patients), benign goiter (27 patients), follicular neoplasm (22 patients), thyroiditis (12 patients), suspicious for papillary carcinoma (nine patients), Hurthle cell neoplasm (five patients), medullary carcinoma (one patient), lymphoma (one patient), and metastatic adenocarcinoma (one patient). Operative findings demonstrated that the overall sensitivity of fine needle aspiration in diagnosing thyroid neoplasia (carcinoma or adenoma) was 88% and its specificity was 80%. Operation verified the cytologic diagnosis of medullary carcinoma, lymphoma, metastatic adenocarcinoma, and seven of nine papillary carcinomas. Of the five patients with an aspiration biopsy diagnosis of Hurthle cell neoplasm, three patients had carcinoma and one had an adenoma. Four carcinomas and 12 follicular adenomas were found in patients with a cytologic diagnosis of follicular neoplasm. Thyroiditis was confirmed at operation in all 12 patients with this diagnosis on fine needle aspiration. One carcinoma was found in the 27 patients with benign goiter diagnosed on cytology. Fine needle aspiration is a valuable tool that can lead to earlier diagnosis and treatment of thyroid cancer. However, a negative aspiration does not supplant good clinical judgement in determining the need for thyroidectomy.
Parathyroid autotransplantation was first described in 1907 by Halsted. However, this simple and effective method of preserving parathyroid function has been used with increasing frequency only during the past 25 years. Beginning in the late 1960s, our group has transplanted normal parathyroid tissue into the ipsilateral sternocleidomastoid muscle whenever these glands could not be preserved in situ with adequate blood supply. In addition, if the blood supply of all four parathyroid glands appeared compromised, cryopreservation of parathyroid tissue was performed in case the autotransplanted tissue did not function after surgery. Since 1970, 393 patients underwent a total thyroidectomy. Parathyroid glands that could not be saved in situ were biopsied to confirm their identity by frozen section and then autotransplanted. Of the 393 patients who underwent a total thyroidectomy, 261 patients required transplantation of one or more glands. Among those 261 patients who underwent selective parathyroid autotransplantation, 33 (13%) required temporary calcium and vitamin D supplementation. Of these 33 patients, 2 (less than 1%) had permanent hypoparathyroidism and are receiving long-term vitamin D therapy.
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