Bidault Sophie, Girard Elizabeth, Attard Marie, Garcia Gabriel, Guerlain Joanne, Breuskin Ingrid, Baudin Eric, Hadoux Julien, Garcia Camilo, Lamartina Livia, Hartl Dana M
Department of Radiology, Gustave Roussy Cancer Campus and University Paris-Saclay, Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France.
Department of Surgery, Anesthesia and Interventional Medicine, Thyroid Surgery Unit, Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France.
Gland Surg. 2022 Jan;11(1):91-99. doi: 10.21037/gs-21-580.
Intraoperative neuromonitoring (IONM) in thyroid surgery requires electric stimulation of the vagus nerve to verify correct electrode placement. Classically the nerve is found deep to or in-between the common carotid artery and internal jugular vein, but previous studies have shown that the nerve can sometimes be found superficial to the vessels. Our aim was to determine the incidence of a superficial vagus nerve using ultrasound (US) and study possible clinical factors associated with an anteriorly-located vagus nerve.
Retrospective study of patients undergoing thyroid surgery (lobectomy or total thyroidectomy) with intermittent IONM. Substernal goiters, locally invasive tumors or bulky lymph nodes were excluded. The vagus nerve was identified at the level of the mid-thyroid lobe on each side on preoperative US performed by two specialized radiologists, and its location according to 6 possible positions in relationship to the common carotid artery was recorded. The anatomic variability of the vagus nerve was analyzed in relationship to patient demographics and thyroid pathology.
Five-hundred twenty-seven patients were included. The right vagus nerve (n=522) was in-between, superficial or deep to the vessels in 92.3%, 6.1% and 1.5% and of cases, respectively, and the left vagus (n=517) in 80.2%, 18.6% and 1.2% of cases, respectively, with a statistically significant difference between right and left vagus nerves (P<0.001). The type of pathology, size of the dominant nodule or the volume of the thyroid lobe were not correlated to finding a superficial vagus nerve.
The vagus nerve was identified in all cases on US and found to be anterior to common carotid artery at the level of the thyroid lobe in 18.6% of cases on the left and 6.1% of cases on the right. Identifying this anatomic variant preoperatively may facilitate IONM and avoid inadvertent trauma to the vagus nerve during thyroid surgery.
甲状腺手术中的术中神经监测(IONM)需要对迷走神经进行电刺激,以验证电极放置是否正确。传统上,该神经位于颈总动脉和颈内静脉的深部或两者之间,但先前的研究表明,该神经有时可在血管的浅部发现。我们的目的是使用超声(US)确定迷走神经浅部的发生率,并研究与位于前方的迷走神经相关的可能临床因素。
对接受间歇性IONM的甲状腺手术(叶切除术或全甲状腺切除术)患者进行回顾性研究。排除胸骨后甲状腺肿、局部侵袭性肿瘤或巨大淋巴结。由两名专业放射科医生在术前超声检查中在甲状腺中叶水平识别每侧的迷走神经,并记录其相对于颈总动脉的6种可能位置的位置。分析迷走神经的解剖变异与患者人口统计学和甲状腺病理的关系。
纳入527例患者。右侧迷走神经(n = 522)分别在92.3%、6.1%和1.5%的病例中位于血管之间、浅部或深部,左侧迷走神经(n = 517)分别在80.2%、18.6%和1.2%的病例中如此,左右侧迷走神经之间存在统计学显著差异(P < 0.001)。病理类型、优势结节大小或甲状腺叶体积与发现浅部迷走神经无关。
在所有病例中均通过超声识别出迷走神经,在甲状腺叶水平,左侧18.6%的病例和右侧6.1%的病例中发现迷走神经位于颈总动脉前方。术前识别这种解剖变异可能有助于IONM,并避免甲状腺手术期间对迷走神经的意外损伤。