Your thyroid gland is one of the endocrine glands that make hormones to regulate physiological functions in your body, like metabolism. The thyroid gland is located in the middle of the lower neck, below the larynx (voice box) and wraps around the front half of the trachea (windpipe). It is shaped like a bow tie, just above the collarbones, having two halves (lobes) which are joined by a small tissue bar (isthmus).
Diseases of the thyroid gland are very common. Some of the most common thyroid problems are:
Surgery is used to treat thyroid problems if:
Surgery is rarely used to treat hyperthyroidism. It may be used if the thyroid gland is so big that it makes swallowing or breathing difficult or thyroid cancer has been diagnosed or is suspected. You may have all or part of your thyroid gland removed, depending on the reason for the surgery.
Most people leave the hospital the day after surgery. How much time you spend in the hospital and how fast you recover depend on your age and general health, the extent of the surgery, and whether cancer is present.
Thyroid surgery is generally a safe surgery. But there is a risk of complications, including:
If you have a total thyroidectomy, you will develop hypothyroidism and need to take man-made (synthetic) thyroid hormone for the rest of your life. If you have a lobectomy or subtotal thyroidectomy, you may have hypothyroidism and you may need to take thyroid medicine for the rest of your life.
You will most likely be treated with radioactive iodine after surgery for thyroid cancer to make sure that all the thyroid tissue and cancer cells are gone.
You may have a lobectomy, with or without isthmectomy, if your doctor suspects that a nodule may be cancerous. If you do have cancer, a surgeon usually will do a completion thyroidectomy within a few week.
After surgery for hyperthyroidism, some people will have low calcium levels and may need to take calcium supplements.
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