Published in:
01-10-2011 | Clinical Report
Tracheomalacia after reoperation for an adenomatous goiter located in a unique position
Authors:
Yosuke Nakadate, Taeko Fukuda, Hisato Hara, Makoto Tanaka
Published in:
Journal of Anesthesia
|
Issue 5/2011
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Abstract
Tracheomalacia after thyroidectomy is a life-threatening situation. However, it is difficult to predict postoperative tracheal obstruction with certainty. A case of a 74-year-old woman with a long-standing adenomatous goiter (98 g) is reported. She had undergone partial right lobe thyroidectomy 54 years earlier. After total thyroidectomy, she was reintubated and required a tracheostomy because of tracheomalacia. The right residual thyroid tumor weighed only 5 g, but it extended to the retrotracheal space. Because the right lobe had stretched the membranous wall of the trachea over a long period of time, the tracheal lumen was thought to have collapsed because of loss of the foundation of the tracheal cartilage (the residual right lobe) along with the supportive surrounding tissue (the left lobe) after surgery. The present case suggests that the occurrence of tracheomalacia could be attributed to reoperation and retrotracheal extension. Thus far, six preoperative predictive factors for the development of severe postoperative respiratory obstruction have been reported: goiter for more than 5 years, preoperative recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy, significant tracheal narrowing and/or deviation, retrosternal extension, difficult endotracheal intubation, and thyroid cancer. Two more factors, reoperation and retrotracheal extension of tumor, may also be risks for airway obstruction after thyroidectomy.