Abstract

Alterations in neck anatomy after thyroid surgery and post-operative fibrosis may be misleading by causing sonoelastographic changes in recurrent tissues in patients with recurrent nodular goiter and so may result in unnecessary biopsies or surgical procedures. Here, the aim was to examine thyroid sonoelastography values in patients developing a recurrence and presenting with recurrent nodular goiter with benign cytology after total or near-total thyroidectomy (T/N-TT). Twenty-nine nodules from 22 patients with a recurrence after T/N-TT whose biopsies were found to be benign constituted the patients, and 23 nodules from 23 participants among the non-operated patients having solitary or multiple thyroid nodules and with age, gender and body mass index values similar to those of the patients constituted our controls. Shear-wave velocity (SWV) values were measured. Average elapsed time after T/N-TT was 11.82 (4:25) y. No difference was detected between the groups in terms of localization and sonographic structures of the nodules. Nodule SWV values were higher in the operated recurrent nodular goiter group than in the controls (2.93 ± 0.87 m/s vs. 2.43 ± 0.33 m/s, respectively, p=0.011). Because SWV values are high in operated recurrent nodular goiter patients, the utilization of reference sonoelastography values in those with unoperated goiter may yield misleading results in the differentiation of benign and malignant lesions.

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