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Surgical Treatment of Endemic Goiter in a Nonhospital Setting Without General Anesthesia in Africa

Overview
Journal World J Surg
Publisher Wiley
Specialty General Surgery
Date 2014 Apr 15
PMID 24728536
Citations 4
Authors
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Abstract

Background: Endemic goiter remains a serious public health problem and 75 % of people affected live in underdeveloped countries where treatment is difficult for various reasons. The aim of this article is to report our experience in African countries with the management and surgical treatment of endemic goiter, performed in a nonhospital setting and without general anesthesia in the context of a collaborative development project by experienced endocrine surgeons.

Methods: Fifty-six black African patients with a goiter were studied. Those in poor general health, the elderly, patients with either small goiters or clinical hyperthyroidism, and those presenting with an acute episode of malaria were excluded from the study. Cervical epidural anesthesia with spontaneous ventilation was used and a partial thyroidectomy was performed. The technique used, its immediate complications, and early and late follow-up were analyzed.

Results: Surgery was performed on 31 patients with grades 3 and 4 goiter without mortality and a morbidity rate of 11.9 %, with 97 % of all complications being minor. There were no instances of dysphonia or symptomatic hypocalcemia and the mean stay was 1.57 days (range 1.25-1.93). Follow-up in the first year was 71 % and no case of severe or recurrent hypothyroidism was detected.

Conclusions: Surgery without general anesthesia performed in a nonhospital setting in underdeveloped countries in patients with goiter is a viable option with good results and low morbidity.

Citing Articles

[Thyroid surgery in a context of scarce resources at Saint Martin de Porres Dominican Hospital (Yaounde, Cameroon)].

Pavia A, Pereira Perez F, Peralt I, Herrera Lopez M, Burgos Jimenez E, Ngatia Alex A Med Trop Sante Int. 2024; 4(1).

PMID: 38846128 PMC: 11151901. DOI: 10.48327/mtsi.v4i1.2024.443.


Goiter surgery recommendations in sub-Saharan Africa in humanitarian cooperation.

Martinez J, Gonzalez M, Hernandez Q, Rodriguez M, Torregrosa N, Gil E Laryngoscope Investig Otolaryngol. 2022; 7(2):417-424.

PMID: 35434333 PMC: 9008146. DOI: 10.1002/lio2.764.


Humanitarian Surgical Missions in Times of COVID-19: Recommendations to Safely Return to a Sub-Saharan Africa Low-Resource Setting.

Lopez-Lopez V, Morales A, Garcia-Vazquez E, Gonzalez M, Hernandez Q, Baroja-Mazo A World J Surg. 2021; 45(5):1297-1305.

PMID: 33611661 PMC: 7896831. DOI: 10.1007/s00268-021-06001-x.


Access, availability, and infrastructure deficiency: The current management of thyroid disease in the developing world.

Fualal J, Ehrenkranz J Rev Endocr Metab Disord. 2016; 17(4):583-589.

PMID: 27565137 DOI: 10.1007/s11154-016-9376-x.

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