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Reviewed by the Faculty of Harvard Medical School
Thyroidectomy
  • What Is It?
  • What It's Used For
  • Preparation
  • How It's Done
  • Follow-Up
  • Risks
  • When To Call a Professional
  • Additional Info
  • What Is It?

    Thyroidectomy is the surgical removal of the thyroid gland. This important gland, located in the lower front portion of the neck, produces thyroid hormone, which regulates the body's production of energy. A healthy thyroid gland is shaped like a butterfly, with right and left lobes connected by a bridge called the thyroid isthmus. Depending on the reason for a thyroidectomy, all or part of the thyroid gland will be removed. The various types of thyroidectomy include:

    A thyroidectomy may be performed by using a conventional surgical approach or a newer endoscopic method done through very small incisions.

    What It's Used For

    Conventional thyroidectomy is done for the following reasons:

    In some people, as an alternative to a conventional thyroidectomy, an endoscopic thyroidectomy can be done to remove small thyroid cysts or small benign thyroid nodules (less than 4 centimeters, or about 1? inches). Endoscopic thyroidectomy is not used to treat multiple thyroid nodules, thyroid cancer or thyrotoxicosis.

    Preparation

    About one week before surgery, you will be told to stop taking aspirin and other blood-thinning medications. To reduce the risk of vomiting during surgery, you will be told not to eat or drink anything after midnight the night before surgery. As part of the general preparations for surgery, your doctor will review your allergies and your medical and surgical histories. If you may be pregnant, you must tell your doctor before surgery. Because you will be having a procedure that involves an area above your shoulders, you will be asked to remove all necklaces and earrings before you are taken to the operating room.

    How It's Done

    Both types of thyroidectomy are usually done under general anesthesia. However, if general anesthesia is too risky for a patient, local or regional anesthesia may be used to permit the patient to remain awake during the procedure. An intravenous (IV) line will be inserted into one of your veins to deliver fluids and medications.

    Follow-Up

    About one week after you return home from the hospital, you will visit your doctor for follow-up. At this visit, your doctor will check the healing of your incision or incisions. After thyroid surgery, you may need periodic blood tests to measure your thyroid hormone levels. Calcium and phosphorus levels are checked to evaluate the function of your parathyroid glands, which sometimes are damaged during thyroid surgery. If all of your thyroid gland was removed, you can expect to take thyroid supplements for the rest of your life. You will have more pain after surgery if you had a conventional thyroidectomy than if you had an endoscopic thyroidectomy. However, most patients are not good candidates for endoscopic thyroidectomy because of the type or extent of their thyroid disease.

    Risks

    Thyroidectomy is generally a safe surgical procedure. However, some people have major or minor complications. Possible complications include:

    When To Call a Professional

    Once you return home from the hospital, call your doctor immediately if:

    Additional Info

    American Thyroid Association, Inc.
    6066 Leesburg Pike
    Suite 650
    Falls Church, VA 22041
    Phone: 703-998-8890
    Fax: 703-998-8893
    Email: admin@thyroid.org
    http://www.thyroid.org/

    National Library of Medicine (NLM)
    8600 Rockville Pike
    Bethesda, MD 20894
    Phone: 301-594-5983
    Toll-Free: 1-888-346-3656
    Fax: 301-402-1384
    http://www.nlm.nih.gov/

    Last updated March 04, 2008