Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Complications and survival after one-sided thyroid surgery in dogs
By Reagan, Jennifer K et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2019·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Complications and outcomes associated with unilateral thyroidectomy in dogs with naturally occurring thyroid tumors: 156 cases (2003-2015).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 156 dogs with thyroid tumors underwent surgery to remove one thyroid gland. While most dogs (98.1%) recovered well enough to go home after surgery, about 20% experienced complications, with bleeding being the most common issue. Some dogs developed aspiration pneumonia, which is a lung infection that can occur after surgery. Overall, the median survival time after surgery was about 911 days, indicating that many dogs lived well after the procedure.
People also search for: dog thyroid tumor surgery · complications after dog thyroidectomy · aspiration pneumonia in dogs · dog thyroid surgery recovery time
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe complications and outcomes of dogs undergoing unilateral thyroidectomy for the treatment of thyroid tumors. ANIMALS: 156 dogs undergoing unilateral thyroidectomy for a naturally occurring thyroid tumor. PROCEDURES: Dogs that underwent a unilateral thyroidectomy in 2003 through 2015 were included in a multi-institutional retrospective study. For each dog, information gathered through evaluation of electronic and paper records included perioperative complications, short-term outcome (survival to discharge from the hospital vs nonsurvival), and long-term outcome (survival time). RESULTS: In the perioperative period, complications occurred in 31 of the 156 (19.9%) dogs; hemorrhage was the most common intraoperative complication (12 [7.7%] dogs). Five of 156 (3.2%) dogs received a blood transfusion; these 5 dogs were among the 12 dogs that had hemorrhage listed as an intraoperative complication. Immediately after surgery, the most common complication was aspiration pneumonia (5 [3.2%] dogs). One hundred fifty-three of 156 (98.1%) dogs that underwent unilateral thyroidectomy survived to discharge from the hospital. One hundred-thirteen dogs were lost to follow-up; from the available data, the median survival time was 911 days (95% confidence interval, 704 to 1,466 days). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results indicated that unilateral thyroidectomy in dogs with a naturally occurring thyroid tumor was associated with a perioperative mortality rate of 1.9% and a complication rate of 19.9% and that hemorrhage and aspiration pneumonia were the most common complications. Long-term survival of dogs undergoing unilateral thyroidectomy for the treatment of thyroid tumors was not uncommon.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31573870/