Retrograde Parotidectomy and facial nerve outcomes: A case series of 44 patients Article

International Collaboration

cited authors

  • Kligerman, Maxwell P., Song, Yohan, Schoppy, David, Divi, Vasu, Megwalu, Uchechukwu C., Haughey, Bruce H., Sirjani, Davud

abstract

  • Purpose: The most common surgical method to remove benign parotid tumors remains the prograde approach. We examined if a retrograde surgical technique offers better outcomes than historical prograde controls. Materials and methods: A retrospective chart review at Stanford Hospital was conducted to identify retrograde parotidectomies between February 2012 and October 2014 that were staffed by the senior author (DS) with resident involvement. Facial nerve (FN) outcomes and other post -surgical parameters were recorded. Results: We identified 44 consecutive cases and found that 182% (n=8) of patients experienced temporary paresis and 23% (n=1) experienced minor (HB 2) permanent paresis limited to one branch. The average hospital length of stay was 0.64 days and complication rate was 6.8%. Conclusion: The retrograde technique has complication rates comparable to historical rates for the prograde technique and is amenable to minimally invasive outpatient superficial parotidectomy. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Publication Date

  • September 1, 2017

webpage

published in

category

start page

  • 533

end page

  • 536

volume

  • 38

issue

  • 5

WoS Citations

  • 2

WoS References

  • 17