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Bilateral Modified Radical Neck Dissection

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CHAPTER 1

So, this is a 61 year old male, who, back in 2014, at an outside institution had a total thyroidectomy and central neck dissection, for what proved to be a bilateral papillary thyroid cancer with extrathyroidal extension. Uh, he then underwent radioactive iodine and then, via surveillance, he had the follow-up ultrasound. And this is a schematic from the ultrasound showing obvious bulky disease in the right level IV lymph node compartment, as well as the left level II, III, and IV lymph node compartment. Fine needle aspirate of both the right level IV lymph node as well at the left level III lymph node was, uh, consistent with papillary thyroid cancer, proving that the patient has recurrent metastatic papillary thyroid cancer to bilateral lateral, uh, neck, uh, compartments.

Uh, we don't routinely to do this but he was, um, uh, referred with a CT scan. And this is his CT scan, that gives a few clues. Uh, so this is the right side, this is the left side, this is the jugular vein and carotid artery uh, on the left side.

And on the left side you can see there's obvious bulky disease deep to the sternocleidomastoid muscle, and there's almost a disappearance of the internal jugular vein. And then you have contrast coming back, uh, below, below the vein.

CHAPTER 2

The positioning is essentially the same as we do for total thyroidectomies, meaning that the patient is in a beach chair, semi-Fowler position. Uh, we always make sure we prep and drape very widely, to make sure we have access to the high level II lymph nodes as well.

So, this is the previous incision that the patient had. It hasn't healed perfectly, so we're going to excise that incision to make sure we have a nice cosmetic outcome.

In terms of the landmarks, this is the thyroid cartilage, this is the sternal notch, with the clavicles on each side. So, I'm going to use the old incision and we're going to excise that, and then we're going to bring the incision up on each side, to about 4 cm below the ear lobe. So, here is the external jugular vein on that side, and on this side. So, to make sure we get this symmetrical, I think this one is going to come around a little bit more, like, make it a little bit rounder, okay.

Now we just mark this out so we can perfectly line the skin up at the end of the operation. All right, so, maybe start from over here. Okay, so, so, we're starting.

CHAPTER 3

And then, you just can excise that. We're starting. So, first specimen is going to be called scar revision. But you're making sure we can use the nerve stimulator, right? All right, so this is the scar revision. All right, so, put that away now.

Okay, don't be shy, just clean up all this. Let's increase the Bovie to 20 right now. Yeah, Flora, but you've got to fix that hiccuping, okay.

Let's increase the Bovie to 20 right now. This - It's - He's hiccuping, and we - you know?

All right, so come through, now. All right, so next we’re going to create the subplatysmal flaps, here. But first we want to identify the greater auricular nerve. That's going to be up here. That's the vein, there. So, just open above and below.

There's a little bit of scar tissue here in the midline from the previous. All right, so you come above now. So, tilt the table towards me, double skins.

So first, we're going to dissect out here the external jugular vein which we're eventually going to sacrifice, but that, that will take us to the greater auricular nerve.

Just tilt the table a little bit more towards me. That's good. So, this is the greater auricular nerve right here. So, this is a sensory nerve to the earlobe and, that will bring us back to Erb's point, where we'll find the accessory nerve, about a centimeter and a half superior to the insertion of this nerve.

And take a single skin to me, now. Really crank that. You can just fix that lower light for us. Now we're creating the subplatysmal flaps, here. Really crank that up. All the way down here.

I think you can get rid of that and then just follow the vein down here. Okay, so pick that. Pick the whole thing up. Mixter, take a 2. So, just follow that down. Yeah, yeah. He's still, he's still hiccuping. It's still there? Yes, it's still there. The frequency is decreased, but still the same.

CHAPTER 4

It's not pretty, but I guess we'll be able to do it. So, I'll take a fine tonsil, now. So now, the next order of business is going to be to find the accessory nerves. So, this is the great auricular nerve heading in right at Erb's point. So, about 1.5 cm above this point, Erb's point, we're going to identify deep here the accessory nerve. Just score this a little bit.

Get the nerve stim here. All right, so we use the nerve stimulator for the motor nerves here, to identify the accessory. All right, so it's right there, deep. We had it there for a sec. Okay.

All right, go ahead and give him some sux, I can't deal with this anymore. It's like pure monkey business. All right, so we've got the nerve right now. All right, but, that's the...

All right, LigaSure to me. So, now we're sacrificing the external jugular vein, here. Stay closer to me. All right, so tie this. All right, I'll have a Mixter to me.

Okay, so, next order of business - Take a fine tonsil. We're going to open up the anterior border, here, of the sternocleidomastoid muscle, and mobilize the fascia around the - around the SCM. Stay closer to me, you want to get all that tissue. Just going to put you in a little deeper, there.

So, this is all cancer right here. So, we're going to stay high up in the, the sternocleido. If we have to take a little bit of the posterior aspect of the sternocleido just to get negative margins, we certainly can do that. You want to keep that deep, you don't want to fall out with that. Yes. All right, so... Let's just advance here, a little bit.

All right, so, the cancer's a little bit stuck up here on the underside of the sternocleidomastoid muscle. Let's carve through that. We're taking a little bit of muscle with us here, to get sure we get negative margins. And let's carve through that.

Yep, just push through it. I'll switch to Mixter now, for a second. Let me just see if we can open up this plane here. Just touched it directly.

So, the cancer's a little bit stuck on the underside of the sternocleidomastoid muscles. We're going to mobilize it from lateral, just to make sure we get all the tumor here. That's tumor there too, okay. Keep that deep in, okay. Okay. So, let's do this. I'll take a LigaSure. Let's pick this up. Let’s pick it up a little tighter. Okay, so you take this. Yep, let's follow the muscle. Okay, so that's all tumor stuck to the... Okay, wow, that's rock hard. So, so, take a feel there. So, rock hard on the underside there. Okay.

Stay up in the muscle. So, I'm just going to adjust you a little bit, there. Right, get all of this out. All right. So this is all cancer up here, so pull a bit harder there.

Okay, that's good. So here, this is all cancer, this is the IJ here. As we could see on the preoperative scan, the IJ might be involved, so, we're going to make a decision whether to sacrifice the internal jugular vein or not, here. Okay. Okay, so now, just come here. All right, so I'm going to push that tumor down here, so you just follow the muscle here. Just use your finger, push that down. Make sure you stay high up on the muscle. Take that, take back this.

All right, so let's do the omohyoid. So again, this is all tumor, which is unusually hard and adherent here, so... So again, we're going to see if we have to resect the IJ or not.

So, now we're dissecting out the omohyoid muscle. Okay, let's flip this. So Mike, you want to hold on to those at all times, right.

Mixter. Probably going to sacrifice all that. Take a squirt. So, let's just follow that laterally. Put that in there. So, this is all tumor here, okay. Might have to sacrifice that, too.

You know what? Uh, so, because it seems like the omohyoid is involved with the tumor - Yeah, take that. So, usually we preserve the omohyoid, but the cancer laterally here down in level IV is involving the omohyoid muscle, so we're going to resect that en bloc. Take another 2. And then just pass that underneath.

CHAPTER 5

All right, so, to be able to know whether the - Pick, pickups now. Be able to know whether the tumor is invading the IJ or not. So, this is cancer sitting right on top of the IJ. Get to it above, here. Take a blunt tonsil to me, now. All right, so this is the space. The question is whether the tumor is involved here, or not. All right, let's just get a vessel loop on it above, first. Yep, yep, so dissect it. So, don't give up on it, continue to hold it. Okay, and then dissect above and below. Hold tension. So, hold tension for me. Take a blue vessel loop. All right, just follow it up a little bit more.

That's a branch, there, so do this side. Stay a little bit closer to the vein. I'll take an Allis to me. So, make, uh, you know, 10 buckets, call them left modified radical neck dissections level II, III, IV, and V, and then the same on the right.

Here's the digastric muscle right here. Means the hypoglossal nerve is going to be just deep to it, right... Okay. Want to get your nerve stim in? Okay. That's the hypoglossal nerve, right? So, just... Okay, you take that, now.

That's the nerve, right, going right underneath that vein, so, let's just tie that. So you hold there. Mixter. Scissors. And just pull that aside. Just carve that right on the knot. Just use cutting. Okay, that's fine, that's fine. Pickups. All right, flip it thataway. We're going to ligate this buster. This will release the hypoglossal nerve. Just going to put it right there. Pickups, fine tonsil. We have a basal nerve. So, right there, okay. Okay, so now... Is that another branch? Looks like it, right? Okay, you take that. Pickups. We'll just see if we can see the vagus now.

Okay, flip it the other way. Okay, now you can start carving here. Stay a little closer to you. That's the carotid, so just carve that- Yep. Let's just do that.

All right, so, a lot of tumor. This is all tumor as well, so,just follow the carotid down there. Bovie to me. Now, it's - it's going to be - We can - just let that hang first and let's go find the vagus. So then, pull that laterally. Pickups to me.

It's going to be down here. It's from underneath here, just hold tight here. It's this thing here. We're going to have to ligate that anyway. Okay, so if you hold tension on that.

All right, so here, we have the hypoglossal nerve crossing - hold it towards you - the carotid bifurcation is right here. The vagus nerve and then the IJ. But this is all cancer here, so, what I'm thinking, we're going to ligate the vein up here, here, and then below. And then we're going to resect that all, the, the IJ, uh, en bloc, so... For this one, now, you can tie that. I'll take a LigaSure to me.

All right, so that's good. So, that's as far north we need to go, So, let's pick up - ligate this here. And this, this is all, yeah, that's just muscle. And this is, that's the omo - Yeah, insertion of the omohyoid. So, tow in here.

All right, let's find the IJ deep here, now. Let's kill that, fix that. Scissors.

I think this you can carve. All right, LigaSure to me. All is quite stuck here, you know. You want me to try to come through here? Kind of like, lateral, along this border? We're going to take it out all here. Yeah, I'm thinking we're probably resect it all en bloc, there. Because this is the IJ below. Do you want me to get around it down there? I think what we'll do is we'll start mobilizing from lateral to medial and then hopefully we'll be able to get a little bit better exposure down there. And I'll switch to the big Mixter, now, the thick Mixter. So, you want to show me the distal. Use the nerve stim here, again. Okay. So, let's just follow that down a little bit.

CHAPTER 6

All right, so that's the accessory. So we’re going to start mobilizing level Vb here from lateral to medial. LigaSure. So now, we're going to do a bunch of 2-0 ligatures, here.

The reason we're tying everything, pretty much, here, is to avoid seromas or fluid buildups afterwards. And then, we're going to be very- The tumors can be very close to the thoracic duct as we get into level IV here, so, we're going to have to deal with that, as well.

So just carve here, a little bit, like so.

So, Rob, just take that for a second. So, I want to see the accessories, accessories. Right down there. Let me have that big Mixter, now.

All right, so that's all stuck there, so you guys switch, now. Okay, you feel the tumor there, it's, like, rock hard. All right, so... That's good, though. So, we can... Making progress. I'm going to have to probably sacrifice the omo on that side, as well.

It's all hard there. Yeah, that's pos - more positive lymph nodes, there. So, so, grab this here. Bovie. Come through. Yep. Yeah, come through that, too. I think we're going to ligate that here. Let's tilt the table a little bit more towards me, now. Scissors. Tilt the table, left side up. Relax on your right hand.

LigaSure. Another one.

Yep, this is - that's part of the vessel. All right, have another, uh, Allis, for me. See if we can elevate this a little bit more. Stay right there.

Slide that - Yep, all the way down there. Liga. All right, that's actually quite good. So now, we're below the IJ, here. So, this is all tumor, but the IJ is free here. And then free here, okay, so that's good. That's a blow for freedom. Okay, now you can relax a little bit here. Keep that straight, though, you don't need to pull hard. All right. Nerve stim. I'm touching something- Okay. You were just a little bit deep, there. Okay, just follow it down. It's down there, right? Well, which one is it, then? That one. Okay. Okay, so the tumor is sitting right on the phrenic- Let me just see one thing. Okay, alright, that's good, though. LigaSure. Ah, this is hard work! Bad, bad tumor.

Just follow that phrenic down a little bit further. I'll take the scissors back, please, and the DeBakey. Let's see if we can put you in a little deeper, there. Have a nerve stim to me. Nerve stim. Okay, I think that's as low as you need to go. Okay, so that's the phrenic nerve. And we're below the tumor here, so that means we can come, come across all this stuff here. Now we're going to get close to the thoracic duct, here. So, we're going to make sure we ligate everything here. LigaSure.

Yep, just follow that south a little bit. So now we just have to mobilize the whole level V and now we're bringing it medially. We've got the great auricular here, we've got the accessory up here, and the phrenic down here, so we know this is all safe. And then soon we're going to bring that whole specimen from lateral to medial.

See, if I do this, that means I want you to pull a little harder. Yep. Liga. All right, Liga. Okay, that's the tumor, yep. We'll just push that tumor down there. Liga.

Did it catch your glove? Huh? I was just trying to figure out the noise, if it caught your glove, or something. No.

Just hold it north, there, so that - Phrenic cutting up there. Okay right there is good. Just push a little bit over, yep. Just hold tension, here. Okay. That's pretty good, so we're going to flip it now.

So now, we're mobilizing the whole specimen from lateral to medial. I want you to score along the sternocleidomastoid, here. I need a good, uh, Mixter or something. Don't need to go bananas there, so just...

So, I'll tie now, you Liga. So now, we're going as high up here in level II, identifying the med - hypoglossal again, that we dissected out before. Take a Bovie, now, actually. I just - think I can just carve it now. Let's just see below, here. How much... Can you bring that up this way? That's the IJ from below, here. I think just divide that and see what happens.

All right, is it just better to take all that with us? Over to the right, right there it's pretty hard. Over here if I - Hmm. I think if I divide on top, there's a soft spot here. Yeah, I think if I come through here. Yeah, yeah, so try that, yep. [indistinct] Okay, okay. Can you bring that more towards you? Carve that open. So, you hold for me. You hold for me, I'll tie.

You know, let's have this... Stay right there. Hold tension. LigaSure. Yep, tie that.

All right, I'll have a scissors to me. Just hold that there. This will - First we’ll go on level III. Level III? Yeah, and this level II.

All right, so now, our IJ is a little bit more free, here. Take a squirt. Thank you. Take the pickups. Okay, that's good, so now, the question is can you carve out the vagus a little bit better? And the IJ. Is there a branch there, on the IJ? Not sure.

Oh, that feels like tumor there, okay. All right, so follow the vagus, now. I think you can make it come through all that stuff. Okay, but let's take a look, then. So, let's bring that up and then, are we free here? Not yet, huh? Okay. All right, let me have a couple of Allises and then the blunt tonsil.

So, where's phrenic? Phrenic's down there. Carotid down there.

All right, so now... Can I have a blunt tonsil and then a big Mixter, now? So now, we're just going to follow the common carotid down here. Staying away from the nerve. The vagus, that is.

But, you know, the tumor extends all the way down here, so if we have to sacrifice this, we'll have to... All right, so, that's good. Okay, hold that. Thank you. Okie dokie, so... Oh, we're going to do, we're going to do both. I'll take a LigaSure. So, shine down here, that's the phrenic.

You know what? Allis. You don't need to take it out, just let it hang there. All right, I'll have a blunt tonsil to me. Just keep that straight, you don't need hardly need to pull at all with that. I just want to make sure we're not getting the vagus up there. Could I have a DeBakey, please? And scissors. What if you hold that for a second? Pickups. You want me to pull the IJ towards me so you can see- No, I just want to...

That's a branch. I'll tie. Take another one. All right, I'll take a Mixter to me, now. Just make sure you hold it up, away from the vagus. Scissors. All right, take a couple of Allises. Let's put the Allis here. It's pretty stuck here, so - Yep. Pickups, Mixter. And then I'll have a fine Mixter. Gee, that's all tumor here, huh?

But this is the vagus below, right? Uh, just follow that. Right? That's good. You have another yellow vessel loop?

And I'll be around the IJ below there now. I should be, right? So, we have this. This is not around the IJ, this is just- Yeah, okay so let's take that first, because it's clearly not vagus, so, let me just set this up so we can see. Hold on, uh, just want to... Okay, so you can...

A Bovie to me. I need you to crank that pretty hard, there. Okay, let's put that a little bit lower.

All right. So now, this is the, this is the IJ. Take another 2. So, we're going to doubly ligate this, too. So, I'm going to help you down, all the way down there. Right there is good. This is just specimens, now. All right, down here it's softer, so we're getting below it, now. Crank your left hand a little bit. There you go.

So, we're ligating the internal jugular vein here because it's involved with the cancer. Again, the yellow vessel loops are on the vagus nerve. That's very adherent to the cancer, as well. Take a squirt.

Just put that with level IV, okay. Yep, there's going to be more. Gee, this is rock hard, here. We're making progress, though. All right, uh, have another blunt to me.

You know what? I think we're going to have to carve it off the vagus from here. All right, so I'm going to hold tension here.

I'm worried about bleeding. Yep. Yep, yep, yep, yep, yep. Okay. Okay. So, we're going to send a specimen, going to - for permanent, it's going to be called left vagus nerve margin. For permanent. That's left vagus nerve margin. There's going to be a little bit more. DeBakey. Okay. All right, that seems like it's...

All right, so now, finally, the vagus is free here. So now we've got the vagus cleared, all the tumor. We ligated the IJ already. We've got the phrenic down here, so now... And where's... Okay. So now, we can come back and take it from above. All right, I'll have that big Mixter, now. Oh, not easy, not easy, not easy. I think the vagus is going to be okay, though, actually. Liga. The question's whether to resect it altogether, but, you know, I think that's - that's a lot of morbidity, with unclear benefits. It's a bad cancer.

All right, LigaSure. LigaSure. Scissors. Okay, you hold that there, and then... Scissors.

Here's our carotid, here. Okay, so get right on the carotid. This is tumor too, though, right? Mm hmm. Right? Mm hmm. I, I think you just carve this here, see what happens. Just going to protect the carotid, here, and then, so stay below - you see the tumor, so this is tumor, so I want to stay below them. Okay, let's take a look.

Yep, don't worry about that. All right, finally, uh! Not easy, not easy. All right, have a scissors to me. This is level V. That's level IV. And then some more level III.

Okay, all right, I'll take a squirt. That's going to buy him at least 5 years, you know? All right, carve that out. Just this little piece? Yeah, let's see, is that... That's - Okay. This is - goes in level IV, too. He's got a good chance of having a surgical cure with this operation, you know? Level IV. Take that.

CHAPTER 7

All right, so, here is the vagus nerve that we preserved, that was very adhered to the tumor. Uh, take a pickups to me. We ligated the internal jugular vein down here. Here is the IJ, uh, ligated below and above. This is the vagus, which we preserved, even though it was very adherent to the nerve. This is the, uh, common carotid artery, as well as the carotid bifurcation, which we preserved. And up here is the hypoglossal nerve.

Can I have the nerve stimulator? Scissors. So here is the hypoglossal nerve. Here is the phrenic nerve. Hypoglossal and phrenic, okay. So, this is the greater auricular nerve that we preserved. It's right up here. And that's the spinal accessory nerve there.

All right, give us a Valsalva, now, to 40. That's the omohyoid. Yeah, that looks good, all right. So, we can take this off. So, you can - We're going to run around, so tilt to table the other way now.

CHAPTER 8

All right, so now we're over on the uh, right side. So based on preoperative me- Based on preoperative imaging, it doesn't have as extensive disease, but certainly biopsy-proven disease on this side, as well. So again, the same thing, we're identifying the greater auricular nerve first. Take another double skin. So, crank that, really hard.

Okay, go up to that. Yep, open that up there. Just opening the lateral border of the SCM, here.

All right, that's good, so let's go find the spinal accessory. All right, fine tonsil. This you can just carve here. Okay.

Yeah, I think anesthesia wants to steal the show a little bit. That's why they did that thing with the hiccup in the beginning, you know. I'm just saying that you guys wanted to be, sort of, part of the show and steal the show. That's why you did that- That's why you did that hiccup, so you could be... Focal point. Yeah, the focal point, the center piece.

Okay, I'll take a thyroid retractor, now. And take another Allis.

CHAPTER 9

All right, show me that nerve again Okay, so it's heading down there. Okay, let me have the big Mixter, now. You can do a little scoring here first. Just score along there.

Do you think that's just him, or do you think that's... Uh, I think that's just- Here, there's no tumor here, so I think it's just him. Scissors.

So, I'm just going to put you in a little deeper, there. Liga. Liga. All right, so Rob, just take that for a second. Just carve this here. All right, that's good for now.

All right, so, next order of business, we're going to dissect out the sternocleidomastoid muscle. So, we're going to open up the medial border first. I'll take a blunt tonsil, now.

So, Rob, take that.

Okay, that's pretty good, all right. Pickups. Okay. So, slide that laterally. All right, so this is the omohyoid. So, on this side, in contrast to the left side, on the right side here, the omohyoid is not involved with cancer, so we're going to be able to preserve the omohyoid, here.

All right, I'll take a small Penrose. All right, I'll take that from you.

Have an, uh, have the big Mixter, now. Take a LigaSure. Scissors.

CHAPTER 10

All right, so next, we're going to dissect out IJ and the vagus. Pickups, blunt tonsil. So the tumor, I'm feeling the tumor sitting right here. Take a feel there. Take a feel there. All right, so bring all that over towards you, yeah.

I'll take scissors, please. Okay, looks good. So, I want, want this to you, though, so...

Take a Bovie, carve that there. Yellow vessel loop, please.

All right, that's pretty good, right? So that's really as high as we need to go.

CHAPTER 11

This is level II. So just, just right underneath it. So just this- Yep, yep. And then go a little deeper. Yep, right here. And just carve all this stuff. Yep, don't go too deep there. Okay. Yep, just amputate there. Yep.

This is level II. Level II. So that's right modified radical neck dissection level II. You got it, right Rob? Yeah.

Okay, so then, you come below now. Just on top of the vagus.

Okay, that's good. So, let's start laterally, then. Take those out. Okay, I'll take a couple of Allises, and a blunt tonsil, now. And then we're going do a lot of 2-0 ligas. So now, again, we're starting to mobilize things from level V, following the accessory. So, LigaSure to me. And mobilizing all the level Vb lymph nodes here.

There's a little vein underneath. Yep. [sneeze] Bless you. Thank you.

So, I'm just going to put you deep here. So, you're holding the IJ, so, be firm, but gentle, okay?

This is all tumor, here, but, in contrast to the other side, it's coming off easily off the omohyoid muscle, as well as the jugular vein and the vagus nerve. So it's clearly free, there. Then we have the phrenic nerve down here. All right, so you come above, now. Sorry, want me to back up? So, take that. Take this. Just stimulate the phrenic again as it’s heading up there. Okay. LigaSure.

Okay, so just swing that. So we're going to bring the whole specimen from lateral to medial, here. So, we've got that. Then just take that. All right, so I'll take a couple of Allises. All right, so, let's follow that muscle now.

What is that? What, uh, something was beeping there? No? You want to bring that... I think the GoPro is low on battery. I thought we were hooked up to...

Right, just grab that for me. So, just carve this out, now. Pickups. Just stay a little bit closer towards me. You're gonna get close to the... Uh, I think that's just a normal lymph node, but- No, no, it's, that's a lymph node, but I don't think it's- Okay. Oh, maybe. Hold on. Bovie to me.

This is stuck there, okay. I'll have the fine Mixter, now. Could I have a new glove, please?

Bovie. I got it. Bovie. Just keep that towed in, like so. Got it?

Dr. Carling, I'll be right back. Okay. Who's here?

Liga. LigaSure. Scissors.

So, always 90 degrees. You're going to hold the IJ again. So, uh, he'll hold that. So stay right there. Got it?

That's phrenic, there, so stay right- Just take Bovie, here. Okay.

Okay. All right, so that's the specimen. So take heavy scissors, now. I'll take that. So, take a feel here. So this is the whole, the big tumor there, on that side. Heavy scissors. Okay, so this is level V. Move your finger.

I think you may have the buckets already. Right modified radical neck dissection level V. Here's level II. Level II, there's already some stuff in it. This is level II? That's level II in your hand. This is level II. He should, he already started putting stuff in level II.

We're going to start closing here, very soon. This is level III. Level III. And this is level IV. Okay. Level IV.

CHAPTER 12

All right, I'll take a squirt. Take a Valsalva to 40. All right, we can come down. All right, so we have the vagus nerve here, nicely dissected out. I'll take the nerve stim. And then...

Pickup. It's underneath here. That's the phrenic nerve. Yep. And then, so here's the carotid, which was not as involved as compared to the other side. The carotid bifurcation. The IJ, controlled with a vessel loop. And then, show us the accessory - Put that back in. That's the accessory. Nice.

All right, give us one more Valsalva. Put that in there. Are you doing it? That's the great auricular nerve. Looks nice. Okay. You got too much? All right, you can come down.

We're going to use 2 drains, #10 flat JP. Drain stitches.

So, we didn't need to go as high, but the digastric is right here.

CHAPTER 13

Okay. And then I'll have the table down a little bit. Okay, that's good. Make your holes, now.

Drain. Let's take a look. Drain. No, the drain.

Well, let's, let's look at this over here first. So, tilt the head towards you. All right, give us a valsalva, now. Squirt. All right, do it one more time.

All right, cut the needle. Cut the needle. Cut the needle. Okay, too late. Hold this. Hold this. Hold this.

CHAPTER 14

CHAPTER 15

So, as you could see during the operation, we started on the left side, doing the left modified, uh, radical neck dissection. And, uh, there was obvious, uh, invasion of the tumor in the, uh, left level IV lymph node compartment, into the internal jugular vein. So, as you could see during the operation, I sacrificed the vein. And it was also very adhered to the left vagus nerve. Uh, we were able to preserve the vagus nerve, but we did send off, uh, specific surgical margins, as we peeled cancer off, uh, the vagus nerve.

Uh, the right side, in contrast, was quite straightforward, uh, with some obvious bulky disease, but no, uh, extranodal extension was identified, and the, uh, operation was quite, quite straightforward.

So, postoperatively, this patient will now extubate. He will go to regular floor. Uh, we put 2 drains in, 2 number flat JPs on each side, mainly to make sure he doesn't develop a chyle leak or a seroma. We'll probably remove that on postoperative day, uh, 2.

He, uh - typically, patients spend either 1 night or 2 nights. Because we did a bilateral dissection on him, he'll most likely stay 2 nights. We'll have him work with physical therapy for range of motion of his neck muscles, starting tomorrow. Initially, we start him on a low-fat diet, to make sure he doesn't have a chyle leak.

Uh, postoperatively, he can continue physical therapy as an outpatient. And, dependent on what the final pathology, uh, demonstrates, he may or may not need repeat radioactive iodine treatment.