## Correct Answer: D. Calcium, phosphate, and parathormone levels Perioral numbness appearing 3 days post-thyroidectomy is a classic presentation of **hypoparathyroidism** secondary to inadvertent parathyroid gland injury or devascularization during surgery. The perioral paresthesias, along with potential tetany, muscle cramps, and positive Chvostek's/Trousseau's signs, result from **hypocalcemia** caused by loss of parathyroid hormone (PTH) secretion. The parathyroid glands lie in close anatomical proximity to the thyroid (superior and inferior poles), making them vulnerable during thyroidectomy—particularly if the surgeon fails to identify and preserve them. The timing (3 days post-op) aligns with the onset of symptomatic hypocalcemia as serum calcium drops. Investigation must measure **serum calcium, inorganic phosphate, and PTH levels** to confirm hypoparathyroidism: expected findings are low calcium, high phosphate, and low/inappropriately normal PTH. This is the gold standard diagnostic approach per Bailey & Love and standard surgical textbooks. Early recognition and calcium supplementation (oral or IV depending on severity) prevent progression to tetany, seizures, or cardiac arrhythmias—critical in Indian surgical practice where post-operative monitoring resources vary. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Free T3, T4** — This is wrong because perioral numbness 3 days post-thyroidectomy is not a sign of thyroid hormone deficiency (hypothyroidism develops over weeks to months, not days). Free T3/T4 would be relevant if the patient presented with fatigue, weight gain, or cold intolerance weeks later. The acute neurological symptom points to **electrolyte derangement (hypocalcemia)**, not thyroid insufficiency. NBE may trap students who reflexively order thyroid function tests after any thyroidectomy. **B. T3, T4, thyroid-stimulating hormone** — This is wrong because TSH elevation and low thyroid hormones take 2–4 weeks to manifest after thyroidectomy; acute perioral paresthesias at day 3 are not consistent with hypothyroidism. These tests assess thyroid hormone status, not the acute metabolic complication (hypocalcemia from parathyroid injury) causing the patient's symptoms. This option represents a common misconception that all post-thyroidectomy complications relate to thyroid hormone deficiency. **C. Radioiodine scan** — This is wrong because radioiodine imaging is used to detect thyroid cancer recurrence or ectopic thyroid tissue, not to diagnose hypoparathyroidism. The clinical presentation (perioral numbness, acute onset) and timing (3 days post-op) have no bearing on thyroid cancer surveillance. This option is a distractor that confuses post-thyroidectomy follow-up protocols with acute post-operative complications. ## High-Yield Facts - **Perioral paresthesias** within 3 days of thyroidectomy = hypoparathyroidism until proven otherwise; caused by inadvertent parathyroid gland injury or devascularization. - **Hypocalcemia diagnostic triad**: low serum calcium, high serum phosphate, low/normal PTH (distinguishes hypoparathyroidism from other causes of hypocalcemia). - **Parathyroid gland anatomy**: 4 glands (2 superior, 2 inferior) lie in close proximity to thyroid poles; superior glands at level of inferior thyroid artery, inferior glands variable (can be ectopic). - **Chvostek's sign** (facial twitch on tapping facial nerve) and **Trousseau's sign** (carpopedal spasm with blood pressure cuff inflation) are clinical markers of hypocalcemia; perioral numbness is an early sensory manifestation. - **Acute management**: IV calcium gluconate (10–20 mL of 10% solution) if symptomatic; oral calcium carbonate + calcitriol (active vitamin D) for chronic hypoparathyroidism. - **Incidence**: Permanent hypoparathyroidism occurs in 0.3–3% of thyroidectomies in Indian centers; transient hypoparathyroidism (reversible within weeks) is more common. ## Mnemonics **POST-THYROIDECTOMY ACUTE NEURO = HYPO-PARA** **P**erioral paresthesias → **H**ypo**P**arathyroidism. If acute neurological symptoms (numbness, tingling, tetany) appear within days of thyroidectomy, think **parathyroid injury** and check **calcium/PTH**, not thyroid hormones. **HYPOCALCEMIA LABS: CAP** **C**alcium (low), **A**lkaline phosphatase/phosphate (high), **P**TH (low in hypoparathyroidism). Remember: in hypoparathyroidism, PTH is inappropriately LOW despite low calcium—the parathyroid glands are damaged. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs thyroidectomy with thyroid function tests to trap students who assume all post-thyroidectomy complications relate to thyroid hormone status. The key discriminator is **timing and symptom type**: acute neurological symptoms (paresthesias, tetany) at day 3 = electrolyte problem (hypocalcemia), not hormone deficiency. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian surgical practice, many thyroidectomies are performed for endemic goiter or nodular disease without formal parathyroid identification protocols. A high index of suspicion for hypoparathyroidism in any post-thyroidectomy patient with acute paresthesias can prevent progression to life-threatening tetany or seizures—especially in resource-limited settings where IV calcium may not be immediately available. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery, Ch. 39 (Thyroid and Parathyroid); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 405 (Hypoparathyroidism)_
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