Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward

Aim of the study was to audit patients who had undergone parathyroidectomy in the University of Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC) and compare surgical outcomes with that in the literature. Data on demography, aetiology, surgical indications, pre-operative localization, surgery and complications was obtai...

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Main Authors: Roslani, April Camilla, Chang, N.L.W.
Format: Article
Published: Malaysian Medical Association 2006
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/1798/
http://www.e-mjm.org/2006/v61n4/Hyperparathyroidism.pdf
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spelling my.um.eprints.17982019-02-27T04:50:08Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/1798/ Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward Roslani, April Camilla Chang, N.L.W. R Medicine Aim of the study was to audit patients who had undergone parathyroidectomy in the University of Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC) and compare surgical outcomes with that in the literature. Data on demography, aetiology, surgical indications, pre-operative localization, surgery and complications was obtained retrospectively from medical records of patients undergoing parathyroidectomy between 1st October 2000 to 31st October 2005. Twelve patients were identified. Mean age was 50.6 years. 67% were females. The ratio of Chinese, Malays and Indians was 7:4:1. Most surgeries were performed in the last two years (91.7%). Aetiology was mainly tertiary hyperparathyroidism (83%). All patients had pre-operative ultrasound localization. Half underwent total parathyroidectomy without autotransplantation. There were no re-do operations. Mean duration of surgery was 1.96 hours. All patients had abnormal calcium levels at some point following surgery, but 90% were normocalcaemic at last follow-up. Other complications were recur ent laryngeal nerve injury (one) and wound infection (one). There were no peri-operative mortalities. The mean duration of hospital stay was 7.75 days (range 3-17 days). The median duration of follow up was 11 months. The outcome of parathyroidectomy in UMMC is satisfactory with few major complications. Despite this, intensive effort is needed to further improve these results to match those obtained in specialist endocrine centres. Malaysian Medical Association 2006 Article PeerReviewed Roslani, April Camilla and Chang, N.L.W. (2006) Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward. Medical Journal of Malaysia, 61 (4). pp. 410-415. ISSN 0300-5283 http://www.e-mjm.org/2006/v61n4/Hyperparathyroidism.pdf
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Roslani, April Camilla
Chang, N.L.W.
Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward
description Aim of the study was to audit patients who had undergone parathyroidectomy in the University of Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC) and compare surgical outcomes with that in the literature. Data on demography, aetiology, surgical indications, pre-operative localization, surgery and complications was obtained retrospectively from medical records of patients undergoing parathyroidectomy between 1st October 2000 to 31st October 2005. Twelve patients were identified. Mean age was 50.6 years. 67% were females. The ratio of Chinese, Malays and Indians was 7:4:1. Most surgeries were performed in the last two years (91.7%). Aetiology was mainly tertiary hyperparathyroidism (83%). All patients had pre-operative ultrasound localization. Half underwent total parathyroidectomy without autotransplantation. There were no re-do operations. Mean duration of surgery was 1.96 hours. All patients had abnormal calcium levels at some point following surgery, but 90% were normocalcaemic at last follow-up. Other complications were recur ent laryngeal nerve injury (one) and wound infection (one). There were no peri-operative mortalities. The mean duration of hospital stay was 7.75 days (range 3-17 days). The median duration of follow up was 11 months. The outcome of parathyroidectomy in UMMC is satisfactory with few major complications. Despite this, intensive effort is needed to further improve these results to match those obtained in specialist endocrine centres.
format Article
author Roslani, April Camilla
Chang, N.L.W.
author_facet Roslani, April Camilla
Chang, N.L.W.
author_sort Roslani, April Camilla
title Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward
title_short Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward
title_full Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward
title_fullStr Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward
title_full_unstemmed Surgical Outcome of Patients with Hyperparathyroidism in a Nonspecialist Surgical Ward
title_sort surgical outcome of patients with hyperparathyroidism in a nonspecialist surgical ward
publisher Malaysian Medical Association
publishDate 2006
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/1798/
http://www.e-mjm.org/2006/v61n4/Hyperparathyroidism.pdf
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