Abstract

The aim of this study was to analyze the complications following secondary voice prosthesis insertion and impact of previous irradiation on their appearance. This study included 106 totally laryngectomized patients who underwent secondary Provox 2 voice prosthesis insertion. Among them, 79 (74.5%) were irradiated. Surgery, prosthesis, fistula, and voice-related complications were analyzed and presented. Complications occurred in 23 (22%) patients. Fifteen of them were previously irradiated. There were no surgery-related complications. In the group of prosthesis-related complications, one patient had increased negative pressure during swallowing with extremely short prosthesis life time. There were 17 complications in the group of fistula related ones; 3 patients had excessive granulation tissue around the fistula and 14 patients experienced prosthesis displacement (7 had closed esophageal end of the fistula, 5 had the prosthesis turned sideways in an open fistula, one patient inhaled and one ingested the prosthesis). Tracheoesophageal voice was not established in 5 patients. Previous irradiation had no statistically significant influence on the complication rate (P = 0,251). The majority of complications following secondary voice prosthesis insertion are fistula-related ones, among which, displacement of the voice prosthesis is the most common. Previous irradiation does not significantly increase the risk of developing complications.

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