Salivary Glands Surgery

Problems of the parotid, submandibular, or sublingual glands can cause swelling, pain, infections, stones, or tumors. My approach is diagnosis-first and nerve-sparing: we confirm the cause with targeted imaging, favour minimally invasive options when possible, and perform precise surgery with facial-nerve protection and meticulous closure.

What I treat

  • Salivary stones (sialolithiasis) — recurrent swelling/pain with meals, infections
  • Chronic sialadenitis / obstructive duct disease
  • Benign tumors (e.g., pleomorphic adenoma, Warthin tumour)
  • Ranula / mucous cysts of the floor of mouth
  • Post-infectious or post-traumatic duct strictures

When is surgery recommended?

  • Recurrent painful swelling or infections from stones/strictures
  • Enlarging mass or imaging features suggestive of a tumour
  • Failure of conservative care (hydration, sialogogues, gland massage, antibiotics)
  • Uncertain diagnosis where tissue analysis is required

Most patients maintain normal saliva after treatment—the remaining glands compensate.

Techniques (minimally invasive first)

All specimens are sent for histopathology; oncology care is coordinated promptly if required.

Parotid Surgery (Nerve-Sparing Parotidectomy)

  • Indications: tumours, complex stones, recurrent infection.
  • Approach: discreet incision along natural creases; facial-nerve identification/monitoring; superficial or total conservative parotidectomy, or selective extracapsular dissection for small, well-placed benign lesions.
  • Scar & sensation: ear-lobe numbness is common early and often improves.
  • Frey’s syndrome (gustatory sweating) prevention: barrier techniques (e.g., SMAS/fascia interposition) when indicated.

Sialendoscopy (Endoscopic Stone & Duct Treatment)

  • What it is: a miniature endoscope passed through the natural duct opening to visualise and treat stones/strictures.
  • What we do: dilation, basket retrieval, gentle fragmentation; combined approach with a tiny skin or intraoral incision when stones are large/impacted; duct repair and, when needed, a temporary stent.
  • Benefits: gland-preserving, minimal scars, quick recovery.

Transoral Stone Removal (Submandibular / Sublingual)

  • For stones near the duct opening or in the floor of mouth.
  • Small intraoral incision, stone removal, ductal repair, no external scar.
  • Can be paired with sialendoscopy for precise localisation.

Submandibular Gland Excision

  • Indications: deep/proximal stones not amenable to endoscopy, recurrent infection, or tumours.
  • Approach: short incision under the jawline; protection of marginal mandibular, lingual, and hypoglossal nerves; meticulous haemostasis.

Sublingual Gland (Ranula / Plunging Ranula)

  • Preferred treatment: transoral excision of the sublingual gland ± cyst management to reduce recurrence; careful protection of the lingual nerve and Wharton’s duct.

The procedure, step by step

    1. Anaesthesia (general for most open procedures; local or light GA for sialendoscopy)
    2. Planned incision / endoscopic entry and nerve-sparing dissection
    3. Stone removal / tumour excision with clear margins when needed
    4. Duct repair or stenting if indicated; drain for open cases (typically 24–48 h)
    5. Layered closure and scar care protocol; written aftercare

Hospital stay: same-day for sialendoscopy and many transoral cases; 1 night (occasionally 2) for parotid/submandibular surgery.

Recovery & aftercare (typical)

  • Swelling/bruising: 3–10 days depending on procedure; cool packs help
  • Diet: soft foods and good hydration early on; sour sweets (if advised) to stimulate flow after duct work
  • Drains: usually removed 24–48 h
  • Stitches: removed 5–7 days for skin; intraoral sutures often dissolvable
  • Activity: light activity within days; avoid pressure/straining on the area for ~2 weeks
  • Scar care: SPF 50+ for 12 months; silicone gel/taping once healed

Safety & risks (discussed in consent)

  • Temporary weakness of a facial-nerve branch (parotid) or lower-lip asymmetry (marginal mandibular) — usually improves
  • Ear-lobe numbness, altered taste or tongue sensation (rare; lingual nerve proximity)
  • Haematoma, infection, salivary leak/sialocele, seroma; rare long-term dry mouth
  • Frey’s syndrome (gustatory sweating) — barrier techniques reduce risk; treatable if it occurs
  • Stone/tumour recurrence (uncommon with complete treatment)
  • Oncologic findings may require additional surgery or adjuvant care

You receive clear instructions, direct contact pathways, and scheduled reviews.

FAQs

Will I have a visible scar?

Sialendoscopy and many stone removals are scar-free. Parotid/submandibular surgery uses discreet creases under the jawline or around the ear.

Typically no. Remaining glands compensate. We discuss saliva-support strategies if you’re at higher risk.

Recurrence is possible but less likely after full removal and duct optimisation. Hydration and salivary health tips are provided.

We use nerve-sparing technique and monitoring. Temporary weakness can occur and usually resolves; permanent deficit is rare.

Yes. Histopathology is routine to confirm diagnosis and margins.

What to expect from your first consultation

  • Duration – Around 45 minutes, in person or by secure video for international patients.
  • Assessment – Standardised photos (and 3D imaging when useful) to analyse your face from different angles.
  • Discussion – Clear conversation about your goals, what bothers you, and any anatomical or medical constraints.
  • Plan – A step-by-step treatment proposal (often combining surgical and non-surgical options) with recovery times and key milestones.
  • No pressure – You leave with a clear roadmap and all your questions answered, without any obligation to book surgery that day.

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