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Case study head and neck. Gerrit Engelbrecht Department radiology UFS. Case. 24 year old male Refered from ophtalmology Fluctuating mass, painless, left temporal region.( aware of it for several months, insidious in onset ) Mild proptosis of the left eye. No visual field fallout.
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Case study head and neck GerritEngelbrecht Department radiology UFS
Case • 24 year old male • Refered from ophtalmology • Fluctuating mass, painless, left temporal region.( aware of it for several months, insidious in onset ) • Mild proptosis of the left eye. • No visual field fallout. • No cranial nerve fallout. • Normal movement of the globe. • Neurological exam normal. • No systemic illnesses. • No histology available • MRI and CT
General features • Best diagnostic clue: • Cystic, well-demarcated, anterior extraconal mass with fatty, fluid or mixed contents • Location • Tethered to orbital periosteum, near suture lines • Majority extraconal in superolateral aspect of anterior orbit, at frontozygomatic suture (65-75%) • Remainder mostly in superonasal aspect, at frontolacrimal suture, but can occur anywhere
Size • Typically less than 1-2 cm in superficial lesions • Larger in deep, complicated lesions • Morphology • Ovoid, well-demarcated cystic mass • Most show thin definable wall (75%) • No nodular soft tissue outside cyst (80%)
Contents • Internal fat or fluid features; may be mixed or contain debris • Lipid components evident in 40-50% of lesions • Fluid-fluid levels in 5 % of lesions • Dermoid cysts typically but not exclusively contain fat and appear more heterogeneous • Epidermoid cysts typically have features similar to fluid and appear more homogeneous
Subtypes • Superficial (simple, exophytic) • Typically smaller, discrete, rounded • Present in early childhood • Deep (complicated, enclophytic) • More insidious, frequent bony changes • May extend into sinuses, high deep masticator space, or intracranially
Radiographic findings • Scalloped bony lucency with sclerotic margins
CT Findings • NECT • Hypodensefat in about half • Density -30 to -80 HU • Calcification in 15% • Fine or punctate, in cyst wall • osseous remodeling in majority of lesions (85%) • Pressure excavation; smooth, scalloped margins • Thinning of bone, may cause focal dehiscence • Bony tunnel, cleft, or pit in up to one-third, leading to “dumbbell appearance • Irregular margins indicate rupture and inflammatory reaction • Bony changes less common in superficial lesions • CECT • Mild, thin, rim-enhancement • Irregular inflammatory enhancement if ruptured
MR Findings • T1WI • Strongly hyperintense (cf vitreous) if fatty contents • Isointenseor slightly hyperintense otherwise • T2WI • Isointenseor mildly hypointense (cf vitreous) • Heterogeneous debris • TI C+ • Thin rim-enhancement • More extensive inflammation if ruptured • Diffusion and FLAIR • Epidermoidcysts show high signal as in other areas of CNS imaging
Ultrasonographic findings • Adequate for evaluation of simple superficial lesions without posterior extension • High internal reflectivity, variable attenuation • Debris may impair determination of cystic nature
Pathology (general features) • Developmental mass, non-neoplastic contents • Epidermoid: Desquamated keratinaceous debris, cholesterol; thin capsule • Dermoid: Keratin, sebaceous secretions, lipid metabolites, hair; fibrous capsule
Etiology • Congenital inclusion of dermal elements at site of embryonic suture closure • Sequestration of trapped surface ectoderm
Epidemiology • Present from birth; spontaneous occurrence • 10% of head and neck dermoid and epidermoid cysts are periorbital • 5% of orbital masses
Gross pathological features • Whitish, well-delineated mass • Connected to orbital periosteum by fibrovascular tissue • Oily or cheesy material that is tan, yellow, or white • May contain blood or chronic blood products
Microscopic features • Dermoid • Contains dermal structures, including sebaceous glands and hair follicles, blood vessels, fat and collagen within a fibrous capsule • Sweat glands in minority (20%) • Lined by keratinizing squamous epithelium • Epidermoid • Inner surface of thin capsule lined by keratinizing, stratified epithelium • Half show disruption of lining indicating rupture at some point • Inflammatory changes in 40% • Granulomatous reaction, particularly in deep, complicated lesions
Presentation • Most common signs/symptoms: Painless subcutaneous mass (85-90%) • Clinical profile • Nontender, firm; painless in 90% • Fixed to underlying bone (cfsebaccous cyst) • May present with rupture (10-15%) • Secondary to trauma or spontaneously • Acute inflammation mimics cellulitis or inflammatory rhabdomyosarcorna • Can result in entrapment, neuropathy • Mass effect if very large • Diplopia due to restricted movement • Compromise globe or cranial nerves • . Childhood presentation • More common than adult • Subcutaneous nodule near orbital rim • Smaller, little globe displacement • Adult presentation • More commonly arises deep to orbital rim • Often near the lacrimal gland in the extraconal orbit • Less easily palpated; larger, globe displacement • Less well-defined borders, more likely to erode into adjacent structures • Acquired epidermoid cysts of skin are common, but not included in this discussion
Demographics • Age • Most frequently presents in childhood and teenage • Mean age in late teens to twenties • Simple, superficial lesions often present in infancy • May present or grow at any age • Occasionally will appear in adult and grow significantly over several months • Gender: Equal or slight male predominance
Natural history and prognosis • Benign lesion, usually cosmetic considerations • Very slow growth, usually dormant for years • Present during childhood but small and dormant • Becomes symptomatic during rapid growth phase ¡n young adult • Sudden growth or change following rupture • Significant inflammation and increased size • Rarely fistula may occur
Treatment • Surgical resection is curative • Entire cyst must be removed to prevent recurrence, including growth center at periosteal interface • Approach depends on location in orbit • Lesions evident in early childhood should be removed to avoid traumatic rupture • Steroids or non-steroidal drugs to calm inflammation in ruptured lesions
References • Grainger&Allison’s Diagnostic Radiology, Fifth Edition. • Head and neck Imaging, Fourth Edition, Peter M.Som & Hugh D Curtin. • Diagnostic imaging, Head and Neck, H. Ric Harnsberger
Differential diagnosis • Frontal mucocele • Associated with chronic inflammatory sinus disease, e.g., polyposis and noninvasive fungal sinusitis • Expansilemass arising within frontal sinus • Idiopathic orbital pseudotumor • Acute onset pain, edema, and proptosis • Infiltrating mass involving any area of orbit • Lacrimal gland neoplasm • Minor salivary: Adenoid cystic, mucoepidermoid • Destructive bony changes in malignant lesions • Lymphoproliferative lesion • Predilection for lacrimal gland, can involve any area • Benign (hyperplasia) or malignant (NHL) • Other systemic malignancy • Langerhans histiocytosis, leukemia, neuroblastoma • Rhabdomyosarcoma • Malignancy of children and young adults • Invasive mass arising anywhere in orbit • Vascular lesions • Venolymphaticmalformation • Capillary hemangiotna (infants) • Sebaceous cyst • Ovoid; fat density and signal • Mobile, attached to the skin