Intraoperative Assessment of High-Risk Thyroid Nodules Based on Electrical Impedance Measurements: A Feasibility Study.
Jalil Beheshti FiroozabadiReihane MahdaviKhosro ShamsiHossein AtaeeAbdollah ShafieeHojat EbrahiminikHossein CheginiParisa HoseinpourAfshin MoradiNarges YousefpourFaeze AghaeiAli FardoostAlireza GhelichliHadi Mokhtari DowlatabadFarzane HajighasemiNafiseh SamiSeyed Rouhollah MiriMohammad Esmaeil AkbariMohammad AbdolahadPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Precise diagnosis of thyroid nodules is challenging due to non-diagnostic/inconclusive results and uncertainties about the malignancy of follicular neoplasms (FNs), even in frozen-section pathology. Therefore, surgical management, especially in Bethesda III and IV categories, may be complicated, and sometimes a second surgery may be required. The Thyroid Nodule Impedance Measurement System (TN-IMS) consists of a metallic patch attached to submental skin and a G20 I.V. cannula inserted into the targeted nodules. Two impedance-based parameters named Z1kHz and impedance phase slope (IPS) in 100 kHz to 500 kHz of the thyroid nodules are recorded and compared with their histopathological results as the gold standard. TN-IMS was intra-surgically applied to 103 human thyroid nodules and normal thyroid tissues. A remarkable consistency between defined co-ranges of Z1kHz/IPS and the histopathological status of specimens was achieved (p < 0.001). Based on these measurements, it was concluded that intraoperative bioelectrical impedance scanning of thyroid nodules would be a helpful complementary approach to detecting high-risk excision-required thyroid nodules.