Discussion
Diagnosis With Brief Discussion
- Diagnosis
- Thymic paraganglioma
- Radiologic Findings
- Fig. 1 Suspected space-occupying lesion or mass with a mediastinal bulging contour, causing loss of the normal aortopulmonary window silhouette on the PA chest radiograph.
Fig. 2-4 CT scans demonstrate an intensely enhancing soft tissue mass with internal necrotic area and prominently engorged peripheral vascular structures in the mediastinum..
Fig. 5 Post-contrast T1-weighted MR image also demonstrates a large mediastinal mass with strong enhancement.
Fig. 6 T2-weighted MR image shows serpiginous signal voids of internal vessels within the mass.
- Brief Review
- Paragangliomas are rare neuroendocrine tumors originating from paraganglionic cells of the autonomic nervous system and can occur in various locations, including the mediastinum. Although more commonly identified in the head and neck region or within the abdomen, mediastinal paragangliomas, particularly those arising in relation to the thymus, are extremely rare. When present, these tumors often manifest as hypervascular masses with characteristic imaging features.
In our case, a 25-year-old female patient was found to have an asymptomatic mediastinal mass incidentally detected during a medical examination. A mediastinal mass was suspected on the initial chest radiograph. Subsequent contrast-enhanced chest CT demonstrated an intensely enhancing soft tissue mass with an internal poorly enhancing area and prominently engorged peripheral vascular structures in the anterior mediastinum. On MRI, strong vascular enhancement on post-contrast T1-weighted images and serpiginous signal voids of internal vessels on T2-weighted images were noted. These signal voids correspond to the pepper component of the so-called salt and pepper sign, a characteristic MRI finding commonly associated with paragangliomas, reflecting the presence of numerous intratumoral vessels with high-velocity blood flow. However, in our case, the intratumoral hemorrhage typically representing the salt component (pre-contrast T1 high signal intensity) was not clearly identified.
This combination of imaging findings
- References
- 1. Lee KY, Oh YW, Noh HJ, et al. Imaging of Paragangliomas in the Head and Neck: CT and MR Findings. AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2006;186(3):797
- Keywords
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