• Title/Summary/Keyword: Primary intrathoracic goiter

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Primary Intrathoracic Goiter - A case report - (일차성 가슴안 갑상샘종 - 1예 보고 -)

  • Park, Ki Sung
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.131-133
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    • 2009
  • Intrathoracic goiters consist of two types: the primary and secondary type. Primary intrathoracic goiters are very rare. We report here on a case that was resected with using the thoracoscopic assist technique. The transthoracic or transsternal approach is necessary for primary goiters to remove them completely without complications.

Intrathoracic Goiter (흉곽내 갑상선종 1예 보고)

  • 김용환
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.22 no.6
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    • pp.1056-1060
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    • 1989
  • Substernal goiter may be defined as any thyroid enlargement that has 50 to 100 % of its mass inferior to the thoracic inlet. Ectopic substernal goiters are rare, and most substernal gaiters arise from cervical thyroid gland. Fifteen to fifty percent of these patients are asymptomatic. Symptoms, when present, are usually the result of tracheal or esophageal compression. Symptoms are often positional. Standard chest roentgenograms are often diagnostic, but computed tomographic or radioactive iodine scans may be helpful. In symptomatic patients or those in whom explorations are undertaken for diagnostic purpose or exclude carcinoma, surgical removal is indicated. Although cervical thyroids with substernal extension may be safely and successfully removed through a cervical incision, primary substernal goiters by definition derive their blood supply from within the thorax and are better approached by splitting the sternum or through a posterolateral thoracotomy. Recently we experienced a child fist sized secondary posterior mediastinal goiter in 55-year old female. The mass was completely removed through right posterolateral thoracotomy without any complications. The postoperative courses were uneventful.

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