The Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) in Kumasi now has the expertise to perform total Laryngectomy - surgical removal of the voice box - following the successful operation on a 63-year old man.
This follows the return of Dr Anna Konney to the hospital, after her post fellowship training experience in Head and Neck Surgery and Oncology in South Africa.
Dr Konney led a team of Ear, Nose and Throat Surgeons to perform the first combined surgery of total laryngectomy and neck dissection at the hospital.
The seven hour operation was performed on the 63-year-old man with laryngeal cancer (Cancer of the voice box), which had spread to the right side of the neck.
The patient is doing very well after the surgery and has since started adjuvant radiotherapy.
Speaking to the Ghana News Agency, at Kumasi, after the surgery, Dr Konney said data at the Head and Neck Oncology clinic at the hospital indicates that laryngeal cancer was the third commonest cancer in the total population of patients.
Fifteen out of the 160 (9.4%) of patients who visited the clinic between 2004 and 2006 were found to be suffering from the disease, majority of them males.
She said the disease which is supposed to be common among adults between the ages of 60-62 was, however, being detected increasingly in patients around 50 years.
Dr Konney said laryngeal cancer was 6-39 times more likely in smokers than non-smokers. Alcohol abuse was also a risk factor and the combined risk of smoking and alcohol was even far greater.
She said patients usually present late with hoarseness, difficulty in breathing, swallowing and a swollen neck.
Dr Konney explained that late presentation had made it difficult if not impossible for patients to benefit from existing management modalities, adding that, palliative care procedures such as tracheostomy (creating an artificial opening into the trachea), placing a tube in the stomach for feeding, radiotherapy and pain management had been usually offered to help patients.
She revealed that patients are often refused total laryngectomy treatment mainly because of the loss of the voice following the surgery and so, few cases of total laryngectomy had been done in the past.
Dr Konney explained that surgical management when combined with other modalities of treatment such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy improved survival rate and quality of life adding that experts are now available at KATH to offer hope for patients.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Academic City unveils plastic recycling machine to address plastic pollution
15 mins -
German-based Kanzlsperger makes medical donation to WAFA
2 hours -
It could take over 100 years for Ghana and other African countries to become ‘developed’ – Report
2 hours -
AEC 2024 renews momentum to lift Africa out of poverty despite global shocks
2 hours -
Can RFK Jr make America’s diet healthy again?
2 hours -
Maiden Women in Chemical Sciences conference opens with a call for empowerment
5 hours -
We’ll reclaim all Groupe Nduom stolen assets – Nduom declares
5 hours -
Center for Learning and Childhood Development Director Dr Kwame Sakyi honoured at Ghana Philanthropy Awards
14 hours -
Asantehene receives 28 looted artefacts
14 hours -
CAF WCL 2024: Ghana’s Thelma Baffour wins title with TP Mazembe
15 hours -
Benjamin Boakye slams politicisation of energy sector issues and ECG’s inefficiencies
15 hours -
Erastus Asare Donkor and Dr Neta Parsram win big at 10th Mining Industry Awards
16 hours -
Government is “suppressing information” about power sector challenges – IES Director
16 hours -
Majority of our debts caused by forex shortfall – ECG Boss
16 hours -
Pan-African Savings and Loans supports Ghana Blind Union with boreholes
17 hours