Abstract

Following the era of remote access thyroid surgery in the 1990s, several techniques were developed including transoral endoscopic thyroidectomy vestibular approach (TOETVA), which was invented in 2016. TOETVA has gained acceptance and proven comparable results to the conventional open thyroidectomy. Despite the potential complications that may occur as a result of remote access thyroid surgery, such as nerve, vascular, and tracheal injury, seroma, and hypoparathyroidism, there was an extremely rare late complication of a benign subcutaneous thyroid implantation, which have not been reported following TOETVA. A 28-year-old female was developed multiple subcutaneous nodules after undergoing right lobe TOETVA for 2 years due to a 3.1 cm benign nodular goiter. The nodules were excised via submandibular incision and the pathological results were shown as benign. Thyroid tissue implantation may result from intracorporeal thyroid tissue rupture, as reported in this research. Extending the vestibular incision to 2-2.5 cm and partially cutting the specimen within the retrieval bag were options to prevent further tissue damage or spillage during specimen extraction. Meanwhile, a separate incision, such as the axillary or submandibular incision, may be required to retrieve the larger nodules. Even though there were no absolute guidelines or contraindications for patient selection in TOETVA, an awareness of tissue breakage should always be considered. The optimal size of the nodule for vestibular removal, which would minimize the risk of tissue breakage, still required additional research.

Full Text
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