Tapia's syndrome--a rare complication following cardiac surgery.
Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg. 2012 Jan; 14(1):131-2.IC

Abstract

Tapia's syndrome is a rare complication following cardiac surgery. It includes the extracranial involvement of the recurrent laryngeal nerve and the hypoglossal nerve and results in ipsilateral paralysis of the vocal cord and the tongue. It is usually a complication related to anaesthesia and positioning of the head of the patient during surgery. We describe this rare complication which occurred at our institute. A 49-year old man developed Tapia's syndrome after an uneventful coronary artery bypass surgery. He complained of dysphonia, hoarseness of voice and an inability to swallow soon after extubation. The syndrome resolved completely over the following weeks with no neurological deficit.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Nalladaru Z
Department of Cardiac Surgery, The City Hospital, Dubai Health Care City, Dubai, United Arab Emirates. zubin.nalladaru@thecityhospital.com
Wessels A
No affiliation info available
DuPreez L
No affiliation info available

MeSH

Coronary Artery BypassFollow-Up StudiesHumansHypoglossal Nerve DiseasesMaleMiddle AgedPatient PositioningPostoperative ComplicationsRecurrent Laryngeal NerveSyndromeVocal Cord Paralysis

Pub Type(s)

Case Reports
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22108947