Ruijs C D, Ottow R T, van Vroonhoven T J
Department of Surgery, University Hospital, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Neth J Med. 1994 Sep;45(3):101-3.
Neck exploration for hyperparathyroidism is sometimes withheld from elderly patients out of concern for the risks. The question whether this concern is founded in fact was examined in a consecutive series of 18 patients aged 70 years or older who were operated for primary hyperparathyroidism in the period 1988-1993. The patients were referred by 6 institutions.
Thirteen patients were considered symptomatic and 5 asymptomatic. The most common presenting symptoms were fatigue (n = 8), skeletal changes (n = 4), bone pain (n = 4) and polyuria (n = 4). Urolithiasis occurred in 2 patients. After operation with excision of all enlarged parathyroid glands serum calcium concentrations normalised in all patients. There was no mortality and the only complication was a late haematoma in a patient who used anticoagulants. The median postoperative hospital stay was 5 days (range 2-8 days).
The high cure rate, the low morbidity, the low mortality and the short hospital stay favor neck exploration as the treatment of choice also in the elderly patient.