• Title/Summary/Keyword: True thymic hyperplasia

Search Result 2, Processing Time 0.014 seconds

A case of true thymic hyperplasia in the mediastinum with ectopic thymus in the neck (종격동 진성 흉선 증식증에 동반된 경부 이소 흉선 1례)

  • Kim, Hyun-Jung;Jang, Sun-Hwa;Park, Ji-Sook;Park, Eun-Sil;Seo, Ji-Hyun;Lim, Jae-Young;Park, Chan-Hoo;Woo, Hyang-Ok;Youn, Hee-Shang
    • Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics
    • /
    • v.49 no.9
    • /
    • pp.996-999
    • /
    • 2006
  • True thymic hyperplasia and ectopic thymus are very rare in children. In embryologic aspect, thymus is distributed around cervical area and ends up in mediastinum. This case is simultaneous thymic hyperplasia of neck and mediastinum. Ectopic thymus in the neck and thymic hyperplasia in the mediastinum in children were reported 2 and 7 cases respectively in Korea. In Clinical aspects, these thymic hyperplasia were presented by mass. So we should suspect these benign condition to avoid unnecessary operation or biopsy. We report a case of true thymic hyperplasia in the mediastinum with ectopic thymus in the neck in a 4-month-old male infant and review the relevant literature. We believe this is the first reported case in the world of true thymus hyperplasia in the mediastinum with cervical ectopic thymus in the neck.

Clinical evaluation of thymic tumors: a report of 10 cases (흉선에 발생한 종양 10례에 대한 임상적 고찰)

  • Gwak, Mun-Seop;Lee, Hong-Gyun
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
    • /
    • v.16 no.4
    • /
    • pp.571-583
    • /
    • 1983
  • Thymic tumor is the most common neoplasm originating in the anterior mediastinum. Histologically, thymic tumors and tumorlike conditions have been classified into thymic cyst, thymolipoma, true thymic hyperplasia, thymoma and carcinoid tumor of the thymus gland. We have experienced several tumors and a few tumorlike conditions of the thymus gland in 10 patients: thymoma 6, thymic hyperplasia 2, carcinoid tumor 1 and thymic cyst 1. The age distributions were ranging from 30 to 60 years except for one 3 year old child [malignant thymoma, lymphocytic type], and male to female ratio was 1:1.5. In 6 cases, thymic lesions were removed through lateral thoracic incision [right 2, left 4] because the mediastinal masses were growing far into the pleural space, meanwhile, medially located lesions [4 cases] through median sternotomy incision. Among these 10 patients, 3 were malignant thymomas, in which 2 were died of recurrence after tumor resection. Myasthenia gravis was all noted in 3 females [thymoma 2, thymic follicular hyperplasia 1], in which only two revealed remission in symptoms following thymectomy. The authors would like to recommend early radical thymectomy through median sternotomy incision whenever patients demonstrate suspicious thymic tumor lesions on the chest roentgenogram or generalized myasthenic symptoms.

  • PDF