Reexploration for symptomatic hematomas after cervical exploration
- PMID: 11742317
- DOI: 10.1067/msy.2001.118384
Reexploration for symptomatic hematomas after cervical exploration
Abstract
Background: Hematomas requiring reoperation affect 1% of patients undergoing cervical exploration. This complication has implications for the trend toward outpatient procedures.
Methods: Retrospective review of 13,817 patients undergoing thyroidectomy and parathyroidectomy at this institution (1976 to 2000) identified 42 patients with hematomas requiring reoperation. Case controls (n = 42) were matched for age, gender, and type and year of operation. Perioperative risk factors and outcome were compared.
Results: Study and control groups were composed of 18 men and 24 women (mean age, 62 years) undergoing thyroidectomy (n = 21) or parathyroidectomy (n = 21). Comparison of perioperative risk factors yielded no significant difference between groups. Symptoms included respiratory distress in 21 patients, pain/pressure in 11, dysphagia in 8, and drainage in 6. Mean time to symptom onset was 17 hours (range, 10 minutes to 5 days). Eighteen hematomas presented within 6 hours postoperatively, 16 between 7 and 24 hours, and eight beyond 24 hours. The bleeding source was arterial in 11 patients, venous in 8, thyroid/soft tissue in 13, and indeterminate in 10. Mean hospital stay was longer in the study group (7.2 vs 3.6 days, P = .004). The number of patients with complications was higher in the study group (17 vs 7, P = .03). No single complication reached significance: hypocalcemia (8 vs 3, P = .12), wound infection (3 vs 0, P = .87), and others (10 vs 5, P = .21).
Conclusions: (1) No factor foreshadowed this complication. (2) The definition of a high-risk population remains obscure. (3) Sixty percent presented beyond 6 hours postoperatively. (4) Reexploration increased morbidity and lengthened hospital stay.
Comment in
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AAGBI pre-operative hypertension guidelines - a reply.Anaesthesia. 2016 Jul;71(7):848-9. doi: 10.1111/anae.13539. Anaesthesia. 2016. PMID: 27291602 No abstract available.
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