Title: Congenital Disorder
1Congenital Disorder
2Although present at birth masses may not become
clinically apparent until childhood or even
adulthood
3Congenital neck mass
- Branchial system
- Thyroid gland
- Dermoid
- Teratoid
- vascular
4Important criteria
- Age of presentation
- Location of the mass
- Associated symptom
5Thyroglossal duct cyst
- The most common congenital neck mass
- MF
- Majority before age 12
6- Thyroid gland descent begin in the third week
complete by the eight week - As it descent it is intimately associated with
the hyoid bone which is in the process of fusing
in the midline
7It is the failure of thyroglossal duct to
involute that causes thyroglossal duct cysts
8- The majority of the cysts present at or below the
level of the hyoid bone in the midline of the
neck
9Thyroid arrest ( ectopic thyroid )
- Lingual thyroid
- As far as superior mediastinum
10Thyroglossal duct cyst ( physical examination )
- Smooth , nontender
- Rise with swallowing
- Cyst infection
- acute ? in size
- skin erythema
- tenderness
- spontaneous
drainage
11- connection with the pharynx
- polymicrobial infection
- oral pathogen
12- Determination of the location of normal thyroid
tissue is essential prior to the excision of any
suspected cyst or ectopic thyroid . - US is the preferred mode of imaging
- In uncooperate child or dense cyst thyroid scan
should be considered
13Treatment
- preop. Antibiotic for infected cyst
- Sistrunk excision
- Rarely papillary adenoarcinoma
14Reccurence
- 10 in Sistrunk
- Failure of hyoid removal
- Failure of remove section of tongue
- Rupture of the cyst
- Resurgery
15Teratoma dermoid are true developmental
neoplasm
- Arises from pluripotent cells at anatomic sites
where they are not normally found
16Dermoid cyst
- Consist ectoderm mesoderm
- Lined by epidermis and contain hair follicle
sebsceous glands - Smooth nontender mass in submental region
- Surgical removal
17teratoma
- Three germ layers
- Disorganized teratoid cyst ? true teratoma (
epignathi ) - Cervical region
- Firm mobile
- Cystic and solid composition
- Surgical removal
18Branchial arch anomaly
- Present at birth , clinically apparent at
childhood - Develop during third to 7th embryonic week
- Six pairs arches,four paired groove
externally,four paired pouch internally
19First arch
- Meckels cartilage
- Maxilla, malleus , incus , mandible
- Sphenomandibular ligament
- Mylohyoid , ant. Belly of digastric, tensor
tympani , TVP , masseter , temporalis , medial
lateral pterygoids - Trigeminal nerve
- Maxillary artery
20Second arch
- Reichert's cartilage
- Upper body of hyoid bone lesser cornu ,
stylohyoid ligament , styloid process , stapes - Muscle of facial expression , platysma ,
stylohyoid, post. Belly of digastric , stapedius
muscle - Facial nerve
- Stapedial artery
21Third arch
- Greater cornu lesser portion of hyoid bone
- Stylopharyngeous , super and middle constrictor
of the pharynx - Glossopharyngeal nerve
- Part of the internal carotid artery
22Fourth arch
- Thyroid cartilage
- Cricothyroid muscle
- vagus nerve
- arch of the aorta
23Sixth arch
- Cricoid and arytenoid cartilage
- Corniform corniculate cartilage
- RLN
- Inferior constrictor muscle
- Ductus arteriosus
24Pharyngeal pouch
- First pouch form ET middle ear cleft
- Second pouch palatine tonsil
- Third pouch inf parathyroid gland thymic duct
- Fourth pouch sup parathyroid gland
- Sixth pouch ultimobranchial body
25Pharyngeal groove
- First groove external auditory meatus
- The remaining grooves are obliterated by the
caudal overgrowth of the second branchial arch
26A cyst is a collection of fluid in an epithelium
lined sac
27- Groove cyst line with squamous epithelium
- Pouch cyst line with respiratory epithelium
- Sinus tract from epithelial surface to the
deeper tissue - Fistula a tract between skin to the pharynx or
larynx internally
28Branchial cleft anomaly
- At birth or shortly there after
- Small opening along the anterior border of SCM
- Mocoid discharge with URI
- A complete fistula is uncommon with most ending
before the pharynx is reached - Cyst is more common than fistula or sinuses
29Cont.
- Majority arises from second branchial cleft
- Usual course is recurrent infection
- Early surgical excision
- Recurrent cases preopertive fistulogram
30First branchial cleft anomaly
- Uncommon
- First category
- absent external auditory canal
- Second category
- Type I Duplication of membranous EAC
- Type II Duplication of membranous bony
EAC - At angle of mandible
- Fistulous tract at bony membranous junction
-
31Drainage may occur from EAC by palpation of angle
or preauricular mass
32Preauricular sinus
- Malformation of six hillocks that form the
auricle . - Excision
33Second branchial cleft anomalies
- Most common anomaly
- Opening lower half of the neck
- Anterior border of SCM
- Internal opening If present is in the tonsillar
fossa - Surgical removal
34- First branchial sinuses open anterior to the SCM
, above the hyoid bone - Second branchial sinuses open anterior to the SCM
below the thyroid .
35The tract runs between the internal external
carotid arteries and passes lateral to the IX
XII and continues inferior to the posterior belly
of the digastric , opening into the tonsillar
fossa
36- If the fistula opens into the tonsillar fossa ,
the tonsil should be removed to obtain complete
exposure .
37Third branchial cleft cyst
- Very rare Courses posterior and lateral to the
ICA and CN XII , terminate its course at the
level of the piriform sinus
38Lymphangiomas
- Abnormal lymphatic development along the jugular
lymphatic sac - 50 present by 1year
- 90 preent by age 2
- Occurs in the sixth week of emberyonic
development . - Thin-walled endothelial-lined cysts infiltrating
into the surrounding tissue
39Lymphangioma simplex
- Thin-walled lymphatic channel
40Cavernous lymphangioma
41Cystic hygroma
- Large lymphatic dilatation
42The lesion present most often in the posterior
cervical triangle of the neck and are soft ,
nontender poorly defined mass that
transilluminate
43- Surgical excision is the treatment of choice .
- The timing is dependent on the surgeon philosophy
. - Early excision for possibility of infection ,
rapid growth , and potential airway compromise . - Waiting until 3-4 years of age because of
involution and technical ease of operation
44Hemangiomas
- The most common tumor of infancy
- Majority was recognized by the age of 6 months of
age . - Defective embryonic development of the peripheral
vessel . - Arrested development at the endothelial stage
gives rise to these subcutaneous vascular mass
45Type of hemangiomas
- Capillary
- Cavernous
- Juvenile
46- Soft
- Compressible
- Nonpulsatile bluish mass
- Involvement
- parotid
- Neck
- Tongue
- Skin
47- Rapid growth in neonatal period
- Involution at 5 years 50
- Involution at 7years 70
48Lesions that not involve critical structure are
usually observed
49Imaging
- CT scanning outline the lesion
- Angiography
- diagnosis
- embolization
50-
- Symptomatic lesion
- corticosteroid
- interferon-a2a
51Surgical excision
- Critical area
- Spontaneous bleeding
- Recurrent infection
- consumption coagulopathy
52Fibromatosis colli
- Congenital tumor of SCM
- Often detected 2-3 weeks after birth
- Firm nontender
- Involved with the underlying muscle
- Torticollis
- Difficult vaginal delivery and traction on the
HN
53- Usually resolved by 18 months
- US is diagnostic
- Physical therapy prevent long term difficulty
- Permanent lesion surgery