Resection of cervical vagal schwannoma via a post-auricular approach

Acta Oto-laryngologica
Jong-Lyel Roh

Abstract

Cervical vagal schwannomas are extremely rare and gross total resection is the standard treatment modality. However, because the conventional cervical approach leaves an incision scar in a visible area, other approaches need to be developed for young women who want the postoperative scar to be invisible. A 28-year-old female underwent complete resection of a 4x4 cm tumor in her right upper neck via a post-auricular approach using an inverted V-shaped incision along the post-auricular sulcus and hairline. The tumor was a schwannoma originating from the right cervical vagus nerve. Postoperatively, right vocal cord paralysis developed despite careful dissection but completely recovered within 6 months after surgery. The patient was satisfied with an invisible external scar which was hidden by her auricle and hair. A cervical vagal schwannoma can be successfully removed by making an incision in a potentially invisible area.

References

Jun 1, 1988·The Laryngoscope·J D GreenB W Scheithauer
Jul 1, 1994·The Journal of Laryngology and Otology·D J TerrisW E Fee
Jan 14, 2003·Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery : Official Journal of the American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons·Larry L Cunningham, Michael R Warner
Jun 5, 2003·The Journal of Otolaryngology·Lloyd C FordJames Klein
Nov 17, 2004·Archives of Otolaryngology--head & Neck Surgery·Erkhan GençKamil R Peker

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Citations

Apr 17, 2015·World Journal of Surgical Oncology·Giuseppe CavallaroGianfranco Silecchia
Jun 12, 2014·Clinical and Experimental Otorhinolaryngology·Kyu Rin HwangSeung Won Lee

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