O slideshow foi denunciado.
Seu SlideShare está sendo baixado. ×
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Anúncio
Próximos SlideShares
Neck dissection part 1
Neck dissection part 1
Carregando em…3
×

Confira estes a seguir

1 de 130 Anúncio

Mais Conteúdo rRelacionado

Diapositivos para si (20)

Semelhante a Neck dissections (20)

Anúncio

Mais recentes (20)

Anúncio

Neck dissections

  1. 1.  History Of CANCER  Anatomy of HEAD & NECK  LYMPH NODE levels  Staging of CANCER  NECK DISSECTIONS  COMPLICATIONS
  2. 2.  1880  Kocher advocates wide margin lymphadenectomy  1881  Kocher and Packard recommend dissection of submandibular triangle for lingual cancer  1885  Butlin questions RND for oral N0 disease  1888  Jawdynski describes en bloc resection with resection of carotid, IJV, SCM. Ferlito, A et al. Neck Dissection: past, present and future? J. Laryngol Otol. 2005 (1) 1-6.
  3. 3.  1901  Solis-Cohen advocate lymphadenectomy for N0 laryngeal CA  1905 -1906  Crile describes en bloc resection in JAMA  1926  Bartlett and Callander advocate preservation of XI, IJV, SCM, platysma, stylohyoid, digastric  1933  Blair and Brown advocate removal of XI. Ferlito, A et al. Neck Dissection: past, present and future? J. Laryngol Otol. 2005 (1) 1-6.
  4. 4.  1951  Martin advocates Radical Neck Dissection after analysis of 1450 cases › Advocated RND for N+ cases.  1952 – Suarez describes a functional neck dissection › Preservation of SCM, omohyoid, submandibular gland, IJV, XI. › Enables protection of carotid.  1960’s – MD Anderson advocate selective ND of highest risk nodal basins  1967 - Bocca and Pignataro describe the “functional neck dissection”  1975 – Bocca establishes oncologic safety of the FND compared to the RND Ferlito, A et al. Neck Dissection: past, present and future? J. Laryngol Otol. 2005 (1) 1-6.
  5. 5.  The region of theThe region of the body that liesbody that lies between:between:  TheThe LOWER BORDERLOWER BORDER OF THE MANDIBLEOF THE MANDIBLE&&  TheThe SUPRASTERNALSUPRASTERNAL NOTCHNOTCH and theand the UPPER BORDER OFUPPER BORDER OF CLAVICLE.CLAVICLE.
  6. 6. • Superficial cervical fascia • Deep cervical fascia  – Superficial layer • SCM, strap muscles, trapezius  – Middle or Visceral Layer • Thyroid • Trachea • esophagus  – Deep layer (also prevertebral fascia) • Vertebral muscles • Phrenic nerve
  7. 7. Ext. jugular Int. jugular Ant. jugular Sup. thyroid Middle thyroid Inf. thyroid
  8. 8. • Origin – fascia overlying the pectoralis major and deltoid muscle • Insertion – 1) depression muscles of the corner of the mouth, 2) the mandible, and 3) the SMAS layer of the face • Function – 1) wrinkles the the neck 2) depresses the corner of the mouth 3) increases the diameter of the neck 4) assists in venous return
  9. 9. platysma
  10. 10. Sternoclei- domastoid platysma
  11. 11.  Surgical considerations  – Increases blood supply to skin flaps  – Absent in the midline of the neck  – Fibers run in an opposite direction to the SCM
  12. 12. Prevertebral layerTrapezius Investing layer Pretracheal layer Buccopharynge al fascia Carotid sheath esophagu s s.c. m scalenus trachea thyroid Infrahyoid m. Internal jugular vein Common carotid a. Vagus n. pretracheal fascia
  13. 13. • Origin – 1) medial third of the clavicle (clavicular head) 2) manubrium (sternal head)  • Insertion – mastoid process  • Nerve supply – spinal accessory nerve (CN XI)  • Blood supply – 1) occipital a. or direct from ECA 2) superior thyroid a. 3) transverse cervical a.
  14. 14. Sternocleidomastoid
  15. 15.  Function – turns head toward opposite side and tilts head toward the ipsilateral shoulder  • Surgical considerations – Leave overlying fascia (superficial layer of deep cervical fascia down) – Lateral retraction exposes the submuscular recess
  16. 16. • Origin – upper border of the scapula • Insertion – 1) via the intermediate tendon onto the clavicle and first rib 2) hyoid bone lateral to the sternohyoid muscle  • Blood supply – Inferior thyroid a.  • Function – 1) depress the hyoid 2) tense the deep cervical fascia
  17. 17.  Surgical considerations  – Absent in 10% of individuals  – Landmark demarcating level III from IV  – Inferior belly lies superficial to • The brachial plexus • Phrenic nerve • Transverse cervical vessels  – Superior belly lies superficial to • IJV
  18. 18.  • Origin – 1) medial 1/3 of the sup. Nuchal line 2) external occipital protuberance 3) ligamentum nuchae 4) spinous process of C7 and T1-T12  • Insertion – 1) lateral 1/3 of the clavicle 2) acromion process 3) spine of the scapula  • Function – elevate and rotate the scapula and stabilize the shoulder
  19. 19.  Surgical considerations  – Posterior limit of Level V neck dissection  – Denervation results in shoulder drop and winged scapula
  20. 20. • Origin – digastric fossa of the mandible (at the symphyseal border • Insertion – 1) hyoid bone via the intermediate tendon 2) mastoid process • Function – 1) elevate the hyoid bone 2) depress the mandible (assists lateral pterygoid)
  21. 21.  – Posterior belly is superficial to: • ECA • Hypoglossal nerve • ICA • IJV  – Anterior belly • Landmark for identification of mylohyoid for dissection of the submandibular triangle
  22. 22. Division of the neck Anterior triangle Suprahyoid region: submental triangle submandibular triangle Infrahyoid region: muscular triangle carotid triangle Posterior triangle
  23. 23. Submental triangle  Lies below the chin and is bounded laterally by anterior bellies of digastric, and inferiorly by the body of hyoid bone  Covered by skin, superficial fascia and investing fascia  Floor - mylohyoid muscles  Contents - submental lymph nodes
  24. 24. digastric (anterior and posterior belly) stylohyoid mylohyoid Suprahyoid muscles
  25. 25. Submandibular triangle  Bounded by anterior and posterior bellies of digastric and lower border of the body of the mandible  Covered by skin, superficial fascia, platysma and investing fascia  Floor - mylohyoid, hyoglossus and middle constrictor of pharynx  Contents - submandibular gland, facial a., v., hypoglossal n. and v., lingual n., submandibular ganglion and submandibular lymph nodes
  26. 26. Carotid triangle sternocleidomastoid, superior belly of omohyoid and posterior belly of digastic muscles  Covered by skin, superficial fascia, platysma and investing fascia  Floor - prevertebral fascia and lateral wall of pharynx  Contents - common carotid a. and its branches, internal jugular v. and its tributaries, hypoglossal n. with its descending branches, the accessory and vagus nerves, and part of the chain of deep cervical lymph nodes
  27. 27. Muscular triangle  Bounded by midline of the neck, superior belly of the omohyoid and anterior border of the sternocleidomastoid.  Covered by skin, superficial fascia, platysma, anterior jugular v., coutaneous n. and investing fascia  Floor - prevertebral fascia  Contents - sternohyoid, sternothyroid, thyrohyoid, thyroid gland, parathyroid gland, cervical part of trachea and esophagus
  28. 28.  Bounded by posterior border of sternocleidomastoid, anterior border of trapezius and middle third of clavicle  Divided by inferior belly of omohyoid into occipital and supraclavicular triangles
  29. 29.  Arteries:Arteries:  SubclavianSubclavian (3(3rdrd part)part)  Superficial cervical &Superficial cervical & suprascapularsuprascapular (branches of(branches of thyrocervical trunkthyrocervical trunk, a, a branch ofbranch of 11stst part ofpart of subclavian arterysubclavian artery  OccipitalOccipital, a, a branchbranch of external carotidof external carotid arteryartery
  30. 30.  Nerves:Nerves:  Branches ofBranches of cervicalcervical plexusplexus  Spinal part ofSpinal part of accessoryaccessory nervenerve  BrachialBrachial plexusplexus
  31. 31. Occipital triangle  Bounded by posterior border of sternocleidomastoid, anterior border of trapezius and superior border of inferior belly of omohyoid  Covered by skin, superficial fascia, and investing fascia  Floor - prevertebral fascia and scalenus anterior, scalenus medius, scalenus posterior, splenius capitis and levator scapulae
  32. 32.  Contents › Accessory n. - emerges above the middle of the posterior border of sternocleidomastoid and crosses the occipital triangle to trapezius › Cervical and brachial PLEXUS
  33. 33. Supraclavicular triangle  Bounded by posterior border of sternocleidomastoid, inferior belly of omohyoid and middle third of clavicle  Covered by skin, superficial fascia, and investing fascia  Floor - prevertebral fascia and inferior parts of scalenus  Contents › Subclavian v. and venous angle › Subclavian a. › Brachial plexus
  34. 34.  Most commonly injury dissection level Ib  Landmarks: › 1cm anterior and inferior to angle of mandible › Mandibular notch  Subplatysmal  Deep to fascia of the submandibular gland  Superficial to facial vein
  35. 35.  Motor nerve to the tongue  • Cell bodies are in the Hypoglossal nucleus of the  Medulla oblongata  • Exits the skull via the hypoglossal canal  • Lies deep to the IJV, ICA, CN IX, X, and XI
  36. 36.  • Curves 90 degrees and passes between the IJV and ICA – Surrounded by venous plexus  • Extends upward along hyoglossus muscle and into the genioglossus to the tip of the tongue.  Iatrogenic injury  – Most common site - floor of the submandibular triangle, just deep to the duct
  37. 37.  Penetrates deep surface of the SCM  Exits posterior surface of SCM deep to Erb’s point  Traverses the posterior triangle on the levator scapulae  Enters the trapezius about 5 cm above the clavicle Ansa cervicalis Hypoglossal n. (XII) Accessory n. (XI) Phrenic n. Vagus n. (X)
  38. 38.  CN XI – Relationship with the IJV
  39. 39.  Crosses the IJV  • Crosses lateral to the transverse process of the atlas  • Occipital artery crosses the nerve  • Descends obliquely in level II (forms Level IIa and IIb
  40. 40.  Developed by Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center  Ease and uniformity in describing regional nodal involvement in cancer of the head and neck
  41. 41. LYMPH NODES acts as a barrier to the spread of the disease . Virchow in 1860
  42. 42.  CAN BE DIVIDED INTO; a) SUPERFICIAL CHAIN OF LYMPH NODES….. b) VERTICAL DEEP CHAIN OF LYMPH NODES This consists of nodes lying in relation to carotid sheath.These lie along the vessels,trachea,oesophagusand extend from base of skull to root of neck.
  43. 43. 1. Submental 2. Submandibular 3. Parotid / tonsilar 4. Preauricular 5. Postauricular 6. Occipital 7. Anterior cervical superficial and deep 8. Supraclavicular 9. Posterior cervical
  44. 44.  Ia Submental  Ib Submandibular  IIa Upper jugular (Anterior to XI)  IIb Upper jugular (Posterior to XI)  III Middle jugular  IVa Lower jugular (Clavicular)  IVb Lower jugular (Sternal)  Va Posterior triangle (XI)  Vb Posterior triangle (Transverse cervical)  VI Central compartment
  45. 45.  Submental triangle (Ia) › Anterior digastric › Hyoid › Mylohyoid  Submandibular triangle (Ib) › Anterior and posterior digastric › Mandible.
  46. 46.  Ia › Chin › Lower lip › Anterior floor of mouth › Mandibular incisors › Tip of tongue  Ib › Oral Cavity › Floor of mouth › Oral tongue › Nasal cavity (anterior) › Face
  47. 47.  Upper Jugular Nodes  Anterior  Lateral border of sternohyoid, posterior digastric and stylohyoid  Posterior  Posterior border of SCM  Skull base  Hyoid bone  Carotid bifurcation  Level IIa anterior to XI  Level IIb posterior to XI
  48. 48.  Oral Cavity  Nasal Cavity  Nasopharynx  Oropharynx  Larynx  Hypopharynx  Parotid
  49. 49.  Middle jugular nodes › Anterior  Lateral border of sternohyoid › Posterior  Posterior border of SCM › Inferior border of level II › Cricoid cartilage lower border
  50. 50.  Oral cavity  Nasopharynx  Oropharynx  Hypopharynx  Larynx
  51. 51.  Lower jugular nodes › Anterior  Lateral border of sternohyoid › Posterior  Posterior border of SCM › Cricoid cartilage lower border › Omohyoid muscle › Clavicle
  52. 52.  Hypopharynx  Larynx  Thyroid  Cervical esophagus
  53. 53.  Posterior triangle of neck › Posterior border of SCM › Clavicle › Anterior border of trapezius › Va Spinal accessory nodes › Vb  Transverse cervical artery nodes › Supraclavicular nodes
  54. 54.  Nasopharynx  Oropharynx  Posterior neck and scalp
  55. 55.  Anterior compartment › Hyoid › Suprasternal notch › Medial border of carotid sheath › Perithyroidal lymph nodes › Paratracheal lymph nodes › Precricoid (Delphian) lymph node
  56. 56.  Thyroid  Larynx (glottic and subglottic)  Pyriform sinus apex  Cervical esophagus
  57. 57. Face and Scalp Anterior Facial, Ib Lateral Parotid Posterior Occipital, V Eyelids Medial Ib Lateral Parotid, II Chin Ia, Ib, II External Ear Anterior Parotid, II Posterior Post auricular, II, V Middle Ear Parotid, II Floor of mouth Anterior Ia, Ib, IIa > IIb Lower incisors Ia, Ib, IIa > IIb Lateral Ib, IIa > IIb, III Teeth except incisors Ib, IIa > IIb, III Nasal Cavity Anterior Ib Posterior Retropharyngeal, II, V
  58. 58. Nasal Cavity Posterior Retropharyngeal, II, V Nasopharynx Retropharyngeal, II, III, V Oropharynx IIb > IIa, III, IV, V Larynx Supraglottic IIa > IIb, III, IV Subglottic VI, IV Cervical esophagus IV, VI Thyroid VI, IV, V, Mediastinal Tongue Tip Ia, Ib, IIa > IIb, III, IV Lateral Ib, IIa > IIb, III, IV
  59. 59.  • “N” classification – AJCC (1997)  • Consistent for all mucosal sites except the nasopharynx  • Thyroid and nasopharynx have different staging based on tumor behavior and prognosis  • Based on extent of disease prior to first treatment
  60. 60.  Nx: Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed.  N0: No regional lymph node metastases.  N1: Single ipsilateral lymph node, < 3 cm
  61. 61.  N2a: Single ipsilateral lymph node 3 to 6 cm  N2b: Multiple ipsilateral lymph nodes > 6 cm  N2c: Bilateral or contralateral nodes > 6cm  N3: Metastases > 6 cm
  62. 62.  • Standardized until 1991  • Academy’s Committee for Head and Neck Surgery and Oncology publicized standard classification system
  63. 63.  Academy’s classification  – Based on 4 concepts • 1) RND is the standard basic procedure for cervical lymphadenectomy against which all other modifications are compared • 2) Modifications of the RND which include preservation of any non-lymphatic structures are referred to as modified radical neck dissection (MRND)
  64. 64.  Academy’s classification • 3) Any neck dissection that preserves one or more groups or levels of lymph nodes is referred to as a selective neck dissection (SND) • 4) An extended neck dissection refers to the removal of additional lymph node groups or non- lymphatic structures relative to the RND
  65. 65.  Academy’s classification(1991) – 1) Radical neck dissection (RND) – 2) Modified radical neck dissection (MRND) – 3) Selective neck dissection (SND)  • Supra-omohyoid type  • Lateral type  • Posterolateral type  • Anterior compartment type – 4) Extended radical neck dissection
  66. 66.  Medina classification (1989) – Comprehensive neck dissection  • Radical neck dissection  • Modified radical neck dissection – Type I (XI preserved) – Type II (XI, IJV preserved) – Type III (XI, IJV, and SCM preserved) – Selective neck dissection
  67. 67.  Spiro’s classification – Radical (4 or 5 node levels resected)  • Conventional radical neck dissection  • Modified radical neck dissection  • Extended radical neck dissection  • Modified and extended radical neck dissection – Selective (3 node levels resected)  • SOHND  • Jugular dissection (Levels II-IV) -• Any other 3 node levels resected – Limited (no more than 2 node levels resected)  • Paratracheal node dissection  • Mediastinal node dissection  • Any other 1 or 2 node levels resected
  68. 68.  1. Presence of clinically positive N1, N2a, N2b & N3 nodes Treatment of No neck is still a controversy.  2. Extra nodal spread (including skin involvement)  3. Recurrence after RT treatment
  69. 69.  1. Uncontrolled primary lesion  2. Involvement of internal / common carotid artery  3. Presence of distant metastasis.  4. Poor anaesthetic risk patient.
  70. 70.  TYPES  - Apron incision  -Half apron incision  -Conley incision  -Double Y incision  -H incision  -Macfee incision  - Y incision  -Modified Schobinger incision  -Schobinger
  71. 71.    1.Good exposure of the neck and primary disease.  2. Ensure viability of the skin flaps. Avoid acute angles  3. Protect carotid artery even in the cases of wound infection.
  72. 72.  4. Facilitate reconstruction Example, if pectoral muscle is used a lower limb should be near the clavicle to enable flap accommodation.  5. It should be cosmetically acceptable.
  73. 73.  Removes › Nodal groups I-V › SCM, IJV, XI › Submandibular gland, tail of parotid  Preserves › Posterior auricular › Suboccipital › Retropharyngeal › Periparotid › Perifacial › Paratracheal nodes
  74. 74.  Removes › Nodal groups I-V  Preserves › SCM, IJV, XI (any combination) › TYPE A MRND
  75. 75.  Three types (Medina 1989) commonly referred to not specifically named by committee. • Type I: Preservation of SAN • Type II: Preservation of SAN and IJV • Type III: Preservation of SAN, IJV, and SCM ( “Functional neck dissection”)
  76. 76.  • Indications – Clinically obvious lymph node metastases – SAN not involved by tumor –Intraoperative decision
  77. 77.  • Indications – Rarely planned – Intraoperative tumor found adherent to the SCM, but not IJV and SAN
  78. 78.  • Rationale – Suarez (1963) – necropsy and surgery specimens of larynx and hypopharynx – lymph nodes do not share the same adventitia as adjacent BV’s – Nodes not within muscular aponeurosis or glandular capsule (submandibular gland) – Sharpe (1981) showed ) 0% involvement of the SCM in 98 RND specimens despite 73 have nodal metastases  – Survival approximates MRND Type I assuming IJV, and SCM not involved  Widely accepted in Europe • Neck dissection of choice for N0 neck
  79. 79.  Rationale – Reduce postsurgical shoulder pain and shoulder dysfunction – Improve cosmetic outcome – Reduce likelihood of bilateral IJV resection - Contralateral neck involvement
  80. 80.  Definition – Cervical lymphadenectomy with preservation of one or more lymph node groups – Four common subtypes:  • Supraomohyoid neck dissection  • Posterolateral neck dissection  • Lateral neck dissection  • Anterior neck dissection
  81. 81.  Also known as an elective neck dissection • Rate of occult metastasis in clinically negative neck 20-30% • Indication: primary lesion with 20% or greater risk of occult metastasis • Studies by Fisch and Sigel (1964) demonstrated predictable routes of lymphatic spread from mucosal surfaces of the H&N • Need for post-op RT
  82. 82. • Most commonly performed SND • Definition  – En bloc removal of cervical lymph node groups I- III – Posterior limit is the cervical plexus and posterior border of the SCM – Inferior limit is the omohyoid muscle overlying the IJV
  83. 83.  Indications – Oral cavity carcinoma with N0 neck  • Boundaries – Vermillion border of lips to junction of hard and soft palate, circumvallate papillae • Subsites - Lips, buccal mucosa, upper and lower alveolar ridges, retromolar trigone, hard palate, and anterior 2/3s of the tongue and FOM – Medina recommends SOHND with T2-T4 NO or TX N1 (palpable node is <3cm, mobile, and in levels I or II)
  84. 84. Bilateral SOHND  • Anterior tongue  • Oral tongue and FOM that approach the midline – SOHND + parotidectomy  • Cutaneous SCCA of the cheek  • Melanoma (Stage I – 1.5 to 4mm) of the cheek • Byers does not advocate elective neck dissection for buccal carcinoma  – Adjuvant RT given to patients with > 2- 4 positive nodes +/- ECS.
  85. 85. • Definition  – En bloc removal of the jugular lymph nodes including Levels II-IV.  Indications  – N0 neck in carcinomas of the oropharynx, hypopharynx, supraglottis, and larynx
  86. 86.  • Definition – En bloc excision of lymph bearing tissues in Levels II-IV and additional node groups – suboccipital and postauricular.  Indications – Cutaneous malignancies • Melanoma • Squamous cell carcinoma • Merkel cell carcinoma – Soft tissue sarcomas of the scalp and neck
  87. 87.  • Definition  – En bloc removal of lymph structures in Level VI  • Perithyroidal nodes  • Pretracheal nodes  • Precricoid nodes (Delphian)  • Paratracheal nodes along recurrent nerves  – Limits of the dissection are the hyoid bone, suprasternal notch and carotid sheaths
  88. 88.  Indications  – Selected cases of thyroid carcinoma  – Parathyroid carcinoma  – Subglottic carcinoma  – Laryngeal carcinoma with subglottic extension – CA of the cervical esophagus
  89. 89.  • Definition  – Any previous dissection which includes removal of one or more additional lymph node groups and/or non-lymphatic structures.  – Usually performed with N+ necks in MRND or RND when metastases invade structures usually preserved
  90. 90.  Indications  – Carotid artery invasion  – Other examples:  • Resection of the hypoglossal nerve resection or digastric muscle,  • dissection of mediastinal nodes and central compartment for subglottic involvement, and  • removal of retropharyngeal lymph nodes for tumors originating in the pharyngeal walls.
  91. 91.  SUPERSELECTIVE NECK DISSECTION OF HEAD AND NECK cancer – Yet to come
  92. 92.  4 TYPES - INTRA OP - IMMEDIATE POST OP - LATE POST OP - DELAYED COMPLICATIONS
  93. 93.  Inadequate planning  Inadvertent injury to local blood vessels and nerves . -marginal mandibular N. - Spinal accessory N. - Cervical plexus - Brachial plexus - Thoracic duct injury .
  94. 94.  Haemorrhage: Needs evaluation of the extent of bleeding and occasionally may need re-exploration.  Lymph leak: When the drainage is of milky fluid and is persistently high >100ml /day after 2days.A possibility of lymph leak has to be considered.
  95. 95.  Carotid blow out: A dreaded complication that occurs secondary to wound break down. If exposed the carotids have to be covered using vascularised flaps.  Facial oedema: A common occurrence usually settles down in 4-6 weeks.
  96. 96.  Wound infection  Fistulae  Devitalisation of the reconstructed flap
  97. 97.  Dysphagia ( CN V,IX, X, XI)  Shoulder weakness  Trismus
  98. 98.  Pectoralis major myocutaneous flap  Free fibula flap  Deltoid muscle flap  Forehead flap  Cervical flap  Radial forearm flap
  99. 99.  • Cervical metastasis in SCCA of the upper aerodigestive tract continues to portend a poor prognosis  • Staging will help determine what type neck dissection should be performed  • Unified classification of neck nodal levels and classification of neck dissection has to understood well.  • Indications for neck dissection and type of neck dissection, especially in the N0 neck, is a still controversial
  100. 100. THANK YOU HAVE A NICE DAY

×