Technique helps patients swallow, speak after tongue cancer surgery
1/15/2007 Alberta, Canada Sheryl Ubelacker CBC News (www.cbcnews.ca) Doctors at the University of Alberta have pioneered a technique that gives most patients treated surgically for tongue cancer the one thing they want most besides survival - the ability to swallow and speak. Most tongue and other oral cancers are caused by smoking and drinking alcohol - a combination that multiplies the risk dramatically over smoking alone. About 900 Canadians are diagnosed with cancer of the tongue or tonsils each year. Standard surgery involves removing a patch of skin from the forearm to rebuild the base of the tongue after a tumour is removed. But that procedure alone doesn't usually provide enough bulk in the reconstructed tongue because followup radiation can shrink and scar the tissue, destroying the organ's pliability. The result is a reduced ability to speak and to swallow, the latter often leading to the need for a lifelong gastric feeding tube to maintain sufficient nourishment. To help protect the rebuilt tongue from the effects of radiation, Drs. Hadi Seikaly and Jeff Harris of the Edmonton university went a step farther, taking an additional paddle-shaped section of tissue from the forearm - a "jelly roll" of fat and connective tissue they have dubbed a beaver tail - to provide extra bulk. "When you do tongue cancer surgery and you take enough of the tongue, you have to rebuild it somehow so people can talk and swallow," said Seikaly, a head and neck surgeon who credits a team of specialists [...]