## Correct Answer: A. Brachioradialis Parathyroid autotransplantation to the **brachioradialis muscle** is the gold-standard technique in Indian endocrine surgery practice when parathyroid tissue must be preserved during thyroid or parathyroid surgery. The brachioradialis is chosen because it is a superficial, easily accessible muscle in the forearm that allows: (1) **easy monitoring** — the transplanted gland can be palpated and biopsied if needed; (2) **rich vascular supply** — ensures graft survival and function; (3) **minimal morbidity** — the forearm is a non-critical site, and loss of brachioradialis function is clinically insignificant; (4) **accessibility for re-operation** — if hyperparathyroidism develops, the graft can be easily removed or reduced. The technique involves creating a pocket in the brachioradialis, placing minced parathyroid tissue (typically 50 mg) into the muscle, and marking the site with a clip or suture for future identification. This approach is preferred over heterotopic sites (kidney, liver) because it avoids visceral complications and allows direct clinical assessment. Indian endocrine surgery guidelines and standard practice at AIIMS and major tertiary centres follow this protocol for parathyroid autotransplantation. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Sartorius** — The sartorius is a long, thin muscle of the thigh that is deep in location and difficult to access for monitoring or re-operation. While theoretically capable of supporting parathyroid graft survival, it lacks the superficial accessibility and ease of palpation required for clinical follow-up. This is not the standard site used in Indian endocrine surgery practice. **C. Triceps** — The triceps is a large arm muscle with adequate vascularity, but it is located on the posterior aspect of the arm, making it less accessible for routine clinical examination and palpation. The brachioradialis offers superior superficial location and ease of access, making triceps a suboptimal choice despite theoretical feasibility. **D. Biceps** — Although the biceps is superficial and vascular, it is not the standard site for parathyroid autotransplantation. The brachioradialis is preferred because it provides better anatomical separation from the biceps and allows more precise localization for future identification and potential re-operation without compromising arm function. ## High-Yield Facts - **Brachioradialis** is the standard site for parathyroid autotransplantation due to superficial location, easy monitoring, and minimal morbidity. - **50 mg of minced parathyroid tissue** is typically transplanted into the muscle pocket to ensure adequate hormone production. - The transplant site is marked with a **clip or suture** to allow easy identification during future re-operation if hyperparathyroidism develops. - **Forearm location** avoids visceral complications and allows direct clinical palpation for graft assessment. - Parathyroid autotransplantation is performed when inadvertent removal or devascularization occurs during thyroid or parathyroid surgery to prevent permanent hypoparathyroidism. ## Mnemonics **BRACHIORADIALIS = Best Accessible Recipient for Autotransplant** B = Best choice; R = Rich blood supply; A = Accessible for monitoring; C = Clip-marked for future ID; H = Hyperparathyroidism can be managed by re-operation. Use this when recalling parathyroid graft sites. **Forearm > Thigh/Arm for Parathyroid** Superficial forearm muscle (brachioradialis) beats deeper thigh (sartorius) or posterior arm (triceps) because you need to palpate and potentially re-operate. Think: 'Easy access = Easy management.' ## NBE Trap NBE may pair parathyroid autotransplantation with other arm muscles (biceps, triceps) to test whether students know the specific anatomical criteria (superficiality, accessibility, vascular supply) rather than just "any muscle in the arm." The trap is assuming any forearm or arm muscle works equally well. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian tertiary centres, when a parathyroid gland is inadvertently removed or devascularized during thyroid surgery, immediate autotransplantation to the brachioradialis prevents permanent hypoparathyroidism and its complications (tetany, seizures). The forearm site allows the surgeon to palpate the graft during follow-up clinic visits and assess graft function clinically — a practical advantage in resource-limited settings where frequent biochemical monitoring may not be feasible. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Endocrine Surgery chapter); OP Ghai Essentials of Endocrine Surgery_
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