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Published in: Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery 3/2009

01-05-2009 | Current Concepts in Endocrine Surgery

Neck lesions mimicking thyroid pathology

Authors: G. Donatini, P. Iacconi, C. De Bartolomeis, C. Iacconi, S. Fattori, A. Pucci, M. Puccini, P. Miccoli

Published in: Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | Issue 3/2009

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Abstract

Introduction

Nodular lesions within the neck may origin from several structures. A misdiagnosed origin may expose the surgeon to inappropriate procedures. These lesions are paradoxically frequent in high specialised centre for endocrine surgery.

Patients and methods

In the year 2006, three patients were first admitted to our department with a diagnosis of thyroid nodule (1) or lymphatic metastases of thyroid carcinoma (2). The first patient had ultrasound (US) and Tc-99-m scan orienting for thyroid nodule. The two other patients, presented with lateral neck lesion in ipsilateral sincronous and previous diagnosis of papillary thyroid carcinoma, respectively, with US and computed tomography scan confirmed lesion but with a FNA cytology negative for tumoural cells.

Results

All three patients underwent surgical exploration. In the first two cases, a whitish tender nodule (4 and 4.5cm), cleavable from surrounding structures, was removed with final histology of Schwannoma and Paraganglioma, respectively. Both patients experienced Bernard Horner Syndrome. In the last patients, a firm grey nodule of 5cm strictly adherent to muscular planes was removed with diagnosis of Castleman’s Disease.

Conclusions

Nodular neck lesions mimicking a thyroid pathology (thyroid nodules or metastatic lymph nodes) are rare but can represent a tough challenge for surgeons who might fall into incorrect surgical approaches, resulting in high morbidity. Pre-operative work-up would help the surgeon to obtain the correct diagnosis, thus, to follow the better surgical approach. Nevertheless, a careful approach would be used for that neurogenic tumour amenable of resection without jeopardising nervous structures.
Literature
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go back to reference Chaloupka JC, Castillo M, Hudgins P (1990) Castleman’s disease in the neck: a typical appearance on CT. AJR Am J Roentgenol 154:1051–1052PubMed Chaloupka JC, Castillo M, Hudgins P (1990) Castleman’s disease in the neck: a typical appearance on CT. AJR Am J Roentgenol 154:1051–1052PubMed
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go back to reference De Paoli F, Giugliano G, Casadio C, Tredici P, Bruschini R, De Fiori E (2005) Schwannoma of thyroid bed. A case report and considerations on interdisciplinary collaboration. Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital 25(4):250–252PubMed De Paoli F, Giugliano G, Casadio C, Tredici P, Bruschini R, De Fiori E (2005) Schwannoma of thyroid bed. A case report and considerations on interdisciplinary collaboration. Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital 25(4):250–252PubMed
Metadata
Title
Neck lesions mimicking thyroid pathology
Authors
G. Donatini
P. Iacconi
C. De Bartolomeis
C. Iacconi
S. Fattori
A. Pucci
M. Puccini
P. Miccoli
Publication date
01-05-2009
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery / Issue 3/2009
Print ISSN: 1435-2443
Electronic ISSN: 1435-2451
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00423-008-0410-7

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