Background
Post-thyroidectomy voice dysfunction may occur in the absence of laryngeal nerve injury. Strap muscle division has been hypothesized
as one potential contributor to dysphonia.
Methods
Vocal-function data, prospectively recorded before and after thyroidectomy from two high-volume referral institutions, were
utilized. Patient-reported symptoms, laryngoscopic, acoustic, and aerodynamic parameters were recorded at 2 weeks and 3 months
postoperatively. Patients with and without sternothyroid muscle division during surgery were compared for voice changes. Patients
with laryngeal nerve injury, sternohyoid muscle division, arytenoid subluxation or no early postoperative follow-up evaluation
were excluded. Differences between study groups and outcomes were compared using t-tests and rank-sum tests as appropriate.
Results
Of 84 patients included, 45 had sternothyroid division. Distribution of age, gender, extent of thyroidectomy, specimen size,
and laryngeal nerve identification rates did not differ significantly between groups. There was a significant predilection
for or against sternothyroid muscle division according to medical center. No significant difference in reported voice symptoms
was observed between groups 2 weeks or 3 months after thyroidectomy. Likewise, acoustic and aerodynamic parameters did not
differ significantly between groups at these postoperative study time points.
Conclusion
Sternothyroid muscle division is occasionally employed during thyroidectomy to gain superior pedicle exposure. Division of
this muscle does not appear to be associated with adverse functional voice outcome, and should be utilized at surgeon discretion
during thyroidectomy.
Keywords Sternothyroid - Voice - Thyroidectomy
The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position
of the Department of the Navy (LRH), Department of the Army (GC, AS), Department of Defense, nor the U.S. Government.