1. Vocal cord paralysis and recovery with thyroid lymphoma
- Author
-
Petre N. Grozea, Steven M. Sobol, and John B. Jiu
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cord ,Lymphoma ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Vocal Cords ,medicine.disease_cause ,Thyroid lymphoma ,medicine ,Paralysis ,Recurrent laryngeal nerve ,Humans ,Vocal cord paralysis ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Thyroid neoplasm ,Aged ,business.industry ,Thyroid ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Vocal Cord Paralysis - Abstract
Vocal cord paralysis has been reported in 33 patients with thyroid lymphoma for an estimated overall incidence of 17%. There is little expectation of vocal cord function recovery, both because neoplastic invasion is believed irreversible and since surgery often necessitates sacrifice of the recurrent laryngeal nerve. Unlike in most well differentiated thyroid malignancies, external radiation therapy plays a vital role in the treatment of thyroid lymphoma. The patient presented here had complete recovery of vocal cord function following radiation therapy for a large thyroid lymphoma associated with vocal cord paralysis. This is the first reported case of such recovery following treatment for a thyroid neoplasm. The rather rapid and complete recovery of neural function suggests that, at least in some, paralysis is caused by reversible compression rather than by neural invasion or tumor-induced neurolysis.
- Published
- 1985