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Laryngeal cancer is commonly treated with surgery to remove the cancer. All or part of the larynx, or voice box, may be removed. This surgery is called a laryngectomy. The type of procedure needed depends on where the cancer is in the larynx and how big it is. Laryngectomy is often done along with other treatments, like chemotherapy or radiation therapy, to destroy the cancer and help keep it from coming back.
Different surgeries can be done based on the stage of the cancer and where it is. If the cancer has spread, then some of the nearby lymph nodes or muscles in the neck near the larynx may also need to be removed. Types of procedures that might be done include:
The larynx is part of how we eat, breathe, and talk. Surgery in this area might also affect how you look. There are many ways to treat this cancer with surgery. Be sure you understand what type of surgery is best for you and how your body will work and look after it.
All surgery has risks. The risks of laryngeal surgery include:
Possible long-term or permanent side effects depend on the type of surgery and include:
Talk with your doctor about the side effects you may have and your chances of side effects after surgery.
Your doctor will talk with you about the surgery choices that are best for you. Make sure to ask:
After you have discussed all the details with the surgeon, you will sign a consent form. This gives the surgeon permission to do the surgery.
You'll also meet the anesthesiologist and can ask questions about the anesthesia and how it will affect you. Just before your surgery, an anesthesiologist or a nurse anesthetist will give you the anesthesia drugs so that you fall asleep and don't feel pain.
After surgery for laryngeal cancer, you may have to adjust to new ways of eating, drinking, speaking, and breathing. The types of changes you have depend on the type of surgery that was done.
Total laryngectomy takes away your ability to speak using your vocal cords. A therapist called a speech-language pathologist will work with you to help you to speak again. But your voice will sound different. Surgery might also be done later to help you speak again.
If your entire larynx is removed, you'll need to learn to speak in a new way. This will take practice. Before surgery or soon after, the speech-language pathologist may talk with you about your choices for speech. These include:
The larynx also plays an important role in how you breathe. When all of the larynx is removed, you'll need a new way of breathing. The surgical team will make a hole in your neck called a tracheostomy. They will permanently connect your windpipe (trachea), which carries air to the lungs, to this hole in the front of your neck. Breathing, coughing, and sneezing will then be done through this hole, called a stoma, rather than through your nose and mouth.
The stoma may be held open with a tube you breathe through. This tube is called a tracheostomy tube, or trach tube. The trach tube stays in for a few weeks, until the skin around the stoma heals. Some people continue to use the trach tube all or part of the time. Or, it can be removed and a smaller tracheostomy button, called a stoma button, can be used instead. After a while, some people don't use a tube or a button in their stoma.
After a partial laryngectomy, a short-term tracheostomy may be needed. Then the trach tube is removed. Over the next few weeks, the stoma closes. You then breathe and speak in the usual way, although your voice may not sound the same as before.
The stoma must be correctly cared for to prevent problems and complications. Your health care team will help you learn how to care for it.
For a few days after surgery, you won't be able to eat or drink. At first, you'll get nutrients through a tube into one of your veins. This is called IV or intravenous feeding.
In a day or so, your digestive tract will return to normal. But you won't be able to swallow because your throat won't be healed. You'll get foods and liquids through a feeding tube that goes through your nose and throat to your stomach. It will be taken out in 2 or 3 weeks when your throat heals. This will allow you to swallow again and take in enough food through your mouth to maintain your weight.
Swallowing may be hard at first, and you may need the help of a nurse or speech-language pathologist to learn how to swallow again. Over time, you'll return to a regular diet.
When you get home, you may get back to light activity. But you shouldn't do any strenuous activity for about 6 weeks. Your health care team will tell you what kinds of activities are OK while you recover.
If you had surgery to remove lymph nodes in your neck, your shoulder and neck may be weak and become stiff. A physical therapist can help you with special exercises if this happens.
Let your doctor know right away if you have any of these problems after surgery:
There may be other things your doctor wants you to watch for. Be sure you know what to watch for. Also know how to reach your doctor after office hours and on weekends and holidays.