A chest X-ray (Figure 1) showed a homogenous opacity in the anterosuperior mediastinum adjacent to the right heart contour, but the lung transparency and cardiac silhouette were normal. Echocardiography detected an ejection fraction (EF) of 55%, minimal pericardial effusion localized to the right side of heart, normal chamber dimensions, and no regional wall motion abnormalities.
Figure 1: A chest X-ray showed a homogenous opacity in the anterosuperior mediastinum.
The patient then underwent chest computed tomography (CT) which revealed a cystic lesion in the anterior mediastinum extending from the level of thoracic inlet to the T10 vertebra. The lesion was abutting the mediastinal vascular structures, anterolateral chest wall, and anterior pericardium via a fat plane, and tiny, discrete foci of fat densities were seen within the lesion. In addition, a curvilinear segment of collapse was visible adjacent to the lateral margin of lesion, but there was no evidence of any abnormal calcification (Figure 2).
A median sternotomy was then performed in order to excise the cyst, and this revealed a huge, elongated cyst with two non-communicating components originating from the thoracic inlet that were attached to the pericardial surface of the mediastinum by adhesions. Furthermore, it was abutting the superior vena cava (SVC) as well as the brachiocephalic, carotid, and subclavian arteries and was also occupying half of the right hemithorax laterally. The patient left the operating room in good condition, and her postoperative recovery was favorable.
On gross appearance (Figure 3), the external surface of the cyst was smooth. Moreover, it contained thin serohemorrhagic fluid and gross amorphous parietal material.
Figure 3: Gross appearance, the external surface of the cyst was smooth.
A microscopic examination of the cyst wall indicated that it was composed of a thick layer of hyalinized connective tissue with lymphoid foci and a central skeleton of Hassalls corpuscles and nodular aggregates of foamy cells. There was no epithelial lining focally, and pathological examination revealed two loculations in the resected specimen. A tissue diagnosis of the benign thymic cysts was made because the cyst wall contained thymic lymphoid tissue; however, there was no evidence of malignancy.
Thymic cysts may be congenital or acquired. Congenital thymic cysts are remnants of the thyropharyngeal ducts and therefore can occur in the neck or mediastinum. These cysts are usually <6 cm in diameter. In addition, they can be uniloculated or multiloculated and have thin walls. However, acquired cysts are multiloculated with variable cyst wall thickness and range in size from 3 to 17 cm.
The common symptoms for thymic cysts are chest pain, dyspnea, and a cough, but hoarseness of voice[3] and respiratory distress have been reported in rare cases. In 1897, Loupaltl recorded the presence of the first congenital mediastinal thymic cyst during the necropsy of an 18-year-old woman, and the first incidence in the United States occurred in a report by Spees in 1938 when he discovered a thymic cyst in a 25-year old man during a necropsy.[7,8]
The prognosis for thymic cysts is excellent. Total surgical removal is recommended, and no local recurrence have ever been reported. There have also never been, to the best of our knowledge, any reports of malignant degeneration associated with congenital thymic cysts. Nevertheless, a preoperative diagnosis is almost never made. In fact, the actual diagnosis sometimes does not occur until after a pathological examination of the surgical specimen.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
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research and/or authorship of this article.
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