Purpose: Fundamental gray-scale imaging (FGI) is known to be unuseful for thyroid imaging in the early postoperative setting. Thus, we evaluated the feasability of tissue harmonic imaging (THI) early after thyroid resection.
Material and methods: FGI and THI of the neck were performed in 48 consecutive patients 4 days after surgery. The examiner was blinded to patient diagnoses and types of surgery. FGI and THI examinations were stored on videotape and reviewed offline by two different readers who rated the quality of delineation of the organ borders and presence or absence of focal lesions. The results were compared to neck US performed 12 weeks after surgery.
Results: Delineation of the thyroid remnants in THI/FGI was rated to be excellent in 22/2, good in 11/9, poor in 3/16 and not visible at all in 4/13 patients. The correlation between THI-volumetry and control-volumetry was very high (r=0.81; p<0.0001). THI but not FGI depicted presence or absence of solid thyroid nodules with 100% accuracy.
Conclusion: THI is a feasible method for thyroid US in the early postoperative setting. It permits volumetry of the residual thyroid tissue and accurately depicts nodules within the thyroid remnant.